SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - More than 260 people were killed during recent gang attacks on two communities in Haiti's capital, according to a report on Monday by the U.N. political mission in Haiti that questioned the delay in the response by authorities.
UN mission details deadly attacks in Haiti’s capital and questions government’s delayed response
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - More than 260 people were killed during recent gang attacks on two communities in Haiti's capital, according to a report on Monday by the U.N. political mission in Haiti that questioned the delay in the response by authorities.
The report notes that during the first attack - in late January on Kenscoff, in the southern end of the metropolitan area of Port-au-Prince - it took Haiti's military, police and a U.N.-backed mission led by Kenyan police roughly five hours to respond.
The report said authorities had received information about the attack and that the delay possibly underscored a "lack of alignment" between Haiti's National Police and the government.
"The sequence of events in Kenscoff appears to indicate that the security forces did not initially take adequate measures to prevent the first attacks, nor to ensure the rapid deployment of specialized police units, despite reports of an imminent threat posed by gangs," the U.N. mission said.