By Fridah Naliaka, NAIROBI
Kenya
The deployment of 1000 Kenyan police to a United Nations-backed peacekeeping mission in Haiti will cost Ksh.36.5 billion ($240.4 million).
This budgeted amount will
cater for costs of training, administrative support, weapon, ammunition and
anti-riot equipment, transport, technical equipment and general
equipment.
Interior Cabinet Secretary
Kithure Kindiki on Thursday appeared before a joint sitting of the National
Assembly and Senate Committees on National Security, Defence and Foreign
Relations, where he explained that the money will be obtained from UN member
states.
“The resources for this
mission will be mobilised among the member states of the United Nations. They
have already identified the way the funds will be mobilised and made available
for us,” Kindiki told Members of Parliament.
“Unless all resources are
mobilised and availed, our troops will not leave the country. They will not
leave Kenyan soil until the equipment required on the ground in Haiti is in
place,” he assured.
The CS pointed out that while
the deployment of Kenya’s 1000 troops will cost $241,390,961 (Ksh.
36,570,730,591), the total cost of the mission that will involve troops from
other countries will cost $600 (Ksh.91billion).
Given reports that the
security situation in Haiti could be a risk for Kenyan officers, Kindiki
assured MPs that a pre-deployment mission led by the Deputy Inspector General
of Police has been carried out and the security docket is aware of the
situation on the ground.
“Much of the country is fairly
safe. The unsafe parts are pockets of mainly urban areas, safety issues are
different in the urban areas, other places are reasonably safe,”, said Kindiki,
adding that the concept of the operation will ensure they are intelligence-led
and are carried out in a way that does not expose Kenyan officers.
Kindiki also assured MPs that
the mission the mission will be done constitutionally, and in accordance to the
National Police Act, as the officers will be offering a support role.
On his part, Police Inspector
General Japhet Koome said that a selection exercise has been done to identify
the troop members that will be deployed to Haiti in stages.
“The officers were taken
through medical examinations and other suitability tests. It was very fair. We
are not going to Haiti to fail,” Koome said.
The United Nations
Security Council approved the Multinational Security Support mission aimed at
fighting violent gangs that have largely overrun Haiti’s capital,
Port-au-Prince.
Kenya will lead the security
mission, and nations such as The Bahamas, Jamaica, Antigua and Barbuda are also
willing to help.
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