Can Kenyan Police Stabilize Haiti?

Enlarge this image

Godfrey Otunge, commander of the Kenyan police in Haiti, attends a ceremony during a visit by Haitian Prime Minister Garry Conille, to the base of the newly arrived Kenyan police force at their base in the Clercine neighborhood of Port-au-Prince on June 26. Kenyan police arrived in violence-ravaged Haiti on June 25 on a long-awaited mission to help wrest the Caribbean nation from powerful gangs.

Clarens Siffroy/AFP via Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Clarens Siffroy/AFP via Getty Images

Godfrey Otunge, commander of the Kenyan police in Haiti, attends a ceremony during a visit by Haitian Prime Minister Garry Conille, to the base of the newly arrived Kenyan police force at their base in the Clercine neighborhood of Port-au-Prince on June 26. Kenyan police arrived in violence-ravaged Haiti on June 25 on a long-awaited mission to help wrest the Caribbean nation from powerful gangs.

Clarens Siffroy/AFP via Getty Images

The first 400 Kenyan police arrived in Haiti this week, part of a multinational force that will attempt to bring stability back the country. Gangs control most of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince. But the Kenyan police arrived in Haiti as the same police force was firing on protesters in Kenya's capital, Nairobi. We hear about what is happening both in Haiti and in Kenya.

Related posts

Khartoum’s Acropole Hotel, survivor of coups and attacks, succumbs to civil war

5 years in, is the NBA’s Basketball Africa League catching on with African fans?

An AIDS orphan, a pastor and his frantic search for the meds that keep her alive