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Canada 'carefully considering' pleas for help from Haiti

As Haiti rapidly spirals into chaos, a high-ranking Haitian diplomathascalled onCanada and the United Statesto form a strike force toconfrontgangscreatinga humanitarian crisis in the Caribbean country.

Caribbean country facing gang blockade of fuel terminal, shortages, high crime and cholera outbreak

People run while police fire tear gas during a protest demanding the resignation of Haiti's Prime Minister Ariel Henry after weeks of shortages, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Monday. (Ralph Tedy Erol/Reuters)

As Haiti rapidly spirals into chaos, a high-ranking Haitian diplomathascalled onCanada and the United Statesto form a strike force toconfrontgangscreatinga humanitarian crisis in the Caribbean country.

The two countries shouldtake the lead inconfronting Haitiangangs that have blockedaccessto a key fuel terminal, Haiti's ambassador to the U.S. said on Monday.

"We wish to see our neighbours like the United States, likeCanada, take the lead and move fast," said Bocchit Edmond, in reference to providing securityassistance.

"There is a really big threat over the head of the primeminister [Ariel Henry]. If nothing is done quickly, there is a risk of anotherhead of state [being]killed in Haiti," he said, referring tothe 2021 assassination of then-president Jovenel Mose.

Shortages, protests, gun battles

Acute shortages of gasoline and diesel have crippled transportation and forced businesses and hospitals to halt operations, evenasthe country faces a renewed outbreak of cholera that has killed at least 18people.

In addition, demonstrators have blocked roads in the capital and other main cities to demand Henry's resignation and protest rising fuel prices after the prime minister announced in early September that his administration could no longer afford to subsidize fuel.

A man helps a woman with blood on her face during a protest demanding the resignation of Henry, in Port-au-Prince, on Monday. (Ralph Tedy Erol/Reuters)

Gas stations and schools remain shuttered; banks and grocery stores are operating on a limited schedule; and sporadic looting and gun battles between gangs and policehave become increasingly common.

In response to the chaos, Henry last week asked the international community to provide a "specialized armed force" to control gangs that have been blocking the Varreux fuel terminal since last month. UN Secretary GeneralAntonio Guterres has proposed that one or several countries send "a rapid action force" to help Haiti's police, according to a letter to the UN Security Council. Guterres was not suggesting that the force be deployed by theUnited Nations.

Canada expressesconcern

So far, Canada has only said it is "carefully considering" Henry's appeal in consultation with "Haitian authorities and our international partners."

On Monday, Global Affairs Canada said it was extremely concerned about the impact of armed gang activity that has reached "an unprecedented level."

Last Friday, Canada's foreign ministry said 19 member countriesof the Organization of American States were committed to helpingHaitians "overcome the complex security challenges facing thecountry."

Meanwhile, the United States onWednesday said it will boost support for the Haitian police and will speed up delivery of aid. The State Department has also created a new visa restriction targeting those who support the gangs and has sent a coast guard vessel to patrol Haitian waters.

U.S. officials who briefed reporters on Washington'sresponse stopped short of offering to send troops to the island.

"We are ... working to increase and deploy in the comingdays security assistance to the Haitian National Police tostrengthen their capacity to counter gangs and re-establish astable security environment," Secretary of State Antony Blinkensaid.

"We will accelerate the delivery of additional humanitarianrelief to the people of Haiti."

Many Haitians unhappy with foreign intervention

Frdric Boisrond, a Haitian-born sociologist at McGill University in Montreal, said it's not Canada's place to decide what should be done.

"I think we also need to hear the regular citizen in Haiti to know what they want, what they expect, how far they want to go with a country where this is no legitimate government, with nobody in power," he said Wednesday. "At this point, I'm even asking myself if Haiti,at this point, is what we call a country."

He said Canada has attempted to lend legitimacyto Henry's rule, when there are only 10 senators remaining in government who were elected out of 149 members of parliament.

Protesters build a road barricade during a protest to demand Henry step down and to call for a better quality of life, in Port-au-Prince, on Sept. 7. (Odelyn Joseph/The Associated Press)

"Anybody else that is in charge in that country is not elected, has not been chosen by the citizens of the country."

Opponents claim Henry hopes to use foreign troops to keep himself in power a leadership he assumed last year after the assassination of Mose and that many consider illegitimate because he was never elected nor formally confirmed in the post by the legislature. He has failed to set a date for elections, which have not been held since November 2016, but has pledged to do so once the violence is quelled.

Furthermore, many Haitians are unhappy with the idea of a foreign force, having seen little improvement during three previous interventions since early last century.

"Having the same solution and expecting a different result is kind of foolish," Boisrond said.

On Sunday, Haitian senators signed a document demanding that Henry's "de facto government" defer its request for deployment of foreign troops, saying it is illegal under local laws.

Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry speaks at an investiture ceremony for new cabinet ministers, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, November 24, 2021.
Henry is seen in Port-au-Prince, late last year. (Ralph Tedy Erol/Reuters)

Many local leaders rejectthe idea of UNpeacekeepers, noting that they've been accused of sexual assault and of sparking a cholera epidemic that killed nearly 10,000 people during a 13-year mission in Haiti that ended five years ago.

The possible presence of international armed forces is something that bothers Georges Ubin, a 44-year-old accountant, who said he knows of people who have been victimized by peacekeepers and believes foreign intervention would not improve things.

"The foreign troops are not going to solve the major problems that Haiti has," he said. "These are problems that have been around since I was born. It never gets better."

'The whole city is under siege'

The letter that the UNsecretary general submitted Sunday suggests that the rapid action force be phased out as Haitian police regain control of infrastructure, and that two options could follow: member states establish an international police task force to help and advise local officers, or create a special force to help tackle gangs "including through joint strike, isolation and containment operations across the country."

The letter notes that if member states do not "step forward with bilateral support and financing," the UNoperation may be an alternative.

"However, as indicated, a return to UNpeacekeeping was not the preferred option of the authorities," it states.

Not everyone is opposed to the arrival of troops, however. Allens Hemest, 35,hopes to see themsoon. The unemployed man said he recentlyworked at a factory that produced plastic cups but was shut down amid the crisis.

"The whole city is under siege," he said, referring to the capital Port-au-Prince. "If this is going to bring peace, I'm all for it. We can't continue living like this."

With files from CBC's John Mazerolle and The Associated Press