San Juan, Porerto Rico – The security firm of the former Navy Seal Prince Us Navy will soon deploy nearly 200 staff members of various countries in Haiti as part of a year -round agreement to stifle the violence of the gangs, a person who knew the plans on Thursday.
The deployment of Global VECTS is intended to help the government of Haiti to recover large expanses of territories entered during the last year and now controlled by highly armed gangs, said the person, addressed to the Associated Press subject to anonymity to discuss the plans.
The company, which provides logistics, infrastructure, security and defense, is led by Prince, an adult by American president Donald Trump. Prince previously founded the controversial security company Blackwater.
The deployment was reported for the first time by Reuters.
VECTUS Global will also assume a long -term role in Haiti's government adviser on how to restore income recovery capacities once violence has ended, the person said.
In June, Fritz Alphonse Jean, then leader of the Chairman's Transitional Council of Haiti, confirmed that the government used foreign entrepreneurs. He refused to identify the company or say how much the agreement was worth.
Romain Le Court Grandmaison, head of the Haiti Observatory on the global initiative against transnational transnational crime, said operations would violate US law unless the United States private military company has authorization from the United States to work in Haiti.
“In the absence of a coherent and joint Haitian and international strategy, the use of private companies is more likely to fragment the authority and sovereignty than to advance the resolution of the crisis,” he said.
A Trump administration official said the US government had no involvement in hiring Global VECT by the Haitian government. The United States government does not finance this contract or does a surveillance exercise, said the official, who asked for anonymity to discuss the situation.
The Prime Minister's office of Haiti did not send a message for comments, and the members of the Haiti Transitional Council was not put in Haiti either.
Private entrepreneurs, who will come from the United States, Europe and other regions, should advise and support the national police in Haiti and a mission supported by Kenyan police who have trouble removing the violence of the gangs.
The mission supported by the UN has 991 staff members, much less than the 2,500 envisaged, and some $ 112 million in its trust fund – around $ 14% of the estimated dollars need a year, according to a recent United Nations report.
The next deployment of private entrepreneurs comes after the recent appointment of André Jonas Vladimir Paris as a new director general of the country's police.
The information of this article was provided by Joshua Boak of the Associated Press.
