Benedict Kabiru: Authorities confirm officer killed in Haiti
Haiti’s President Fritz Alphonse Jean termed Kabiru as a valiant police officer who made the ultimate sacrifice for a better future for the Caribbean country.
by CYRUS OMBATI
Audio By Vocalize
Police officer Benedict Kabiru who was killed by a gang in Haiti on Tuesday /HANDOUT
The government of Haiti has
identified the Kenyan police officer
killed by a gang in the Caribbean
nation as Benedict Kabiru.
He was shot dead on Tuesday in
Savien while carrying out an anti-gang operation.
The officer, who was part of the
Multinational Security Support
mission in Haiti, was killed during
the operation carried out jointly
with Haitian forces.
Haiti’s President Fritz Alphonse
Jean termed Kabiru as a valiant police officer who made the ultimate
sacrifice for a better future for the
Caribbean country.
“The Presidential Transitional
Council extends its deepest condolences to the government and
people of Kenya, as well as to the
family of Bénédict Kabiru, who fell
on March 25, in Savien while carrying out his mission,” a statement
by the PTC reads.
“This valiant police officer, engaged alongside Haitian forces in
the fight against insecurity, made
the ultimate sacrifice for a better
future for our country. His bravery
and commitment will never be forgotten.”
He vowed to pursue the armed
criminals who shot Kabiru dead,
further promising to hold them accountable for their actions before
the courts.
After the attack, videos
were shared online purporting to
show the officer’s body lying on the
ground.
Kenyan authorities have since
deployed specialised teams to recover his body, which remains in the custody of guns.
The officer comes from Kikuyu,
Kiambu county. Kabiru is the latest Kenyan officer to die in Haiti,
where questions continue to grow
over the mission’s risks and the
safety of the deployed officers.
His death comes just a month
after another Kenyan officer, constable Samuel Kaetuai, was fatally
shot during an anti-gang operation
in the Artibonite region on February 23.
With gangs in Haiti growing
more aggressive and police units
facing logistical challenges, concerns are emerging over how many
more Kenyan officers may have already been killed or could soon lose
their lives in the volatile operation.
The latest attack occurred when
three armoured vehicles carrying
peacekeepers got stuck in a ditch,
suspected to have been deliberately dug by gangs.
As the officers
attempted to recover the vehicles,
they were ambushed, leading to
Kabiru’s fatal shooting.
The MSS mission, led by Kenya,
was launched to support Haitian
authorities in restoring order amid
escalating gang violence.
However, with the increasing
number of casualties and operational difficulties, pressure is
mounting on Kenyan authorities
to address growing concerns over
the safety and effectiveness of the
deployment.
The incident came as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio launched
a tour of the Caribbean with Haiti’s
security crisis high on the agenda.
The US has been a key financial
supporter of MSS, and the security
crisis in Haiti is a focus of Secretary
Rubio’s visit to the Caribbean this
week.
On Wednesday, Rubio met Jean
in Jamaica. The Haitian government said the meeting was meant
to strengthen regional cooperation
related to its challenges.
Over 80 per cent of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince has been estimated to be under gang control.
Since the MSS arrived, gangs
have spread increasingly into rural
areas, seizing swathes of territory
in the agriculturally critical Artibonite region.
In October, the United
Nations said least 70 people, including women and children, were
massacred by the Gran Grif gang
in the same Artibonite town where
the officer was killed on Tuesday.
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