Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08PORTAUPRINCE762
2008-05-27 17:06:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Port Au Prince
Cable title:  

CARIBBEAN SECURITY ASSESSMENT -- HAITI

Tags:  MOPS PREL PTER XL MASS HA 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO4210
OO RUEHQU
DE RUEHPU #0762/01 1481706
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 271706Z MAY 08
FM AMEMBASSY PORT AU PRINCE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 8259
INFO RUEHZH/HAITI COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHBR/AMEMBASSY BRASILIA PRIORITY 1923
RUEHSA/AMEMBASSY PRETORIA PRIORITY 1716
RUEHQU/AMCONSUL QUEBEC PRIORITY 1143
RUMIAAA/HQ USSOUTHCOM J2 MIAMI FL PRIORITY
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK PRIORITY 1511
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 PORT AU PRINCE 000762 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/EX AND WHA/CAR
S/CRS
INL FOR KEVIN BROWN AND ANGELIC YOUNG
SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD
STATE PASS AID FOR LAC/CAR
INR/IAA
WHA/EX PLEASE PASS USOAS
WHA/CAR MICHAEL FORTIN, WHA GIOVANNI SNIDLE

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/21/2018
TAGS: MOPS PREL PTER XL MASS HA
SUBJECT: CARIBBEAN SECURITY ASSESSMENT -- HAITI

REF: SECSTATE 51747

PORT AU PR 00000762 001.2 OF 003


Classified By: Classified By: CDA Thomas C. Tighe for reasons 1.4 (b) a
nd (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 PORT AU PRINCE 000762

SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/EX AND WHA/CAR
S/CRS
INL FOR KEVIN BROWN AND ANGELIC YOUNG
SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD
STATE PASS AID FOR LAC/CAR
INR/IAA
WHA/EX PLEASE PASS USOAS
WHA/CAR MICHAEL FORTIN, WHA GIOVANNI SNIDLE

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/21/2018
TAGS: MOPS PREL PTER XL MASS HA
SUBJECT: CARIBBEAN SECURITY ASSESSMENT -- HAITI

REF: SECSTATE 51747

PORT AU PR 00000762 001.2 OF 003


Classified By: Classified By: CDA Thomas C. Tighe for reasons 1.4 (b) a
nd (d)


1. (C) This message is a response to reftel request for
information concerning Haiti in the framework of exploring
options among CARICOM countries for expanded U.S. support for
Caribbean regional security capacities.

USG Assistance to the Haitian National Police
--------------


2. (C) The Narcotics Affairs and Law Enforcement (NAS)
Section of Embassy Port au Prince implements a program of law
enforcement reform, corrections and counter-narcotics
programs of approximately 15 million USD annually. The
primary components are the US contingent to the police
component of the UN Interim Administrative Mission in Haiti
(MINUSTAH) (USD 9 million); support for the Haitian National
Police (HNP) on training, equipment and infrastructure (USD
4.5 million); and counter-narcotics assistance (USD 1.5
million). Separate funding of USD 5 million is being used to
implement security programs in the Cite Soleil slum area just
outside Port au Prince as part of the Haiti stabilization
Initiative, a USD 20 million DOD-funded project to provide
security and development assistance to a targeted unstable
area of the capital. An additional USD 2.9 million was made
available in FY08 for assistance to Haiti,s prison system.
(Note: Post,s Military Liaison Office and USAID programs
also work with the GOH on disaster preparation and response.
End Note).


3. (C) Haiti has no military. The Haitian National Police
(HNP) is responsible for all security functions. The HNP
includes basic police and specialized units, the Coast Guard,
and the fire brigade. The HNP currently has approximately
9000 officers to cover the entire country. The goal of
MINUSTAH and the international donors is to train and deploy

14,000 HNP by 2011, the minimum number the UN deems necessary
for the country. However, we believe Haiti requires larger
numbers of law enforcement officials to effectively police
the country, including its maritime and land borders.
Cooperation with the HNP has been good since 2004, with the
USG providing extensive funding to support all cadet classes
in the HNP Academy. The USG has also donated more than 500
vehicles to the HNP.


4. (C) Although Haiti has made progress in creating a
professional police force, problems of capacity, corruption,
and inadequate resources remain. The HNP lacks the
capability to adequately confront Haiti,s main security
threats of drug trafficking, kidnapping, cross-border
smuggling of goods and people, and public unrest. The
Haitian Coast Guard (HCG) has merely 104 officers and 10
operating boats (six of which were recently donated or
refurbished by the USG) to cover over 1200 miles of
coastline. Smuggling of drugs, people and small arms are
major problems, as Haiti's status as a transit country
continues to grow. The northern coast is the departure point
for wooden hull sail freighters that traffic people to the
Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands. They sometimes
attempt the dangerous crossing directly to the United States.
Small aircraft drug flights into Haiti are increasing and
much of that illicit cargo leaves Haiti by boat in the north
or across the porous land border into the Dominican Republic.


5. (C) Haiti has recently begun limited cooperation with
Dominican Republic authorities along the land border but that
effort is still in its infancy. Haiti has benefited from
training by the U.S. and other donors, including regional
partners such as the Bahamas. The Government of Turks and
Caicos Islands has been attempting to sign an MOU with Haiti
covering trafficking in persons but that process has stalled.
Haiti still lacks capacity and resources to control its land
border beyond areas immediately adjacent to the four existing
border crossing points, or the maritime borders beyond the
areas closest to the ports of Port-au-Prince and Cap Haitien.

PORT AU PR 00000762 002.2 OF 003


The Haitian Coast Guard (HCG) has no base on the vulnerable
southwestern corner of the country (the 'southern claw'),
although the Canadian Government is constructing an HCG base
in Les Cayes.


6. (C) Haiti has a Joint Intelligence Center within the
Ministry of Interior to compile and analyze drug trafficking
information. Its activities have been very limited to date.
Other countries in the region have expressed a desire to
establish greater intelligence sharing with Haiti,
particularly in reference to traffic on the northern coast.
However, Haiti does not yet have the capacity to link into
other centers, and still lacks the vetted staff to share
intelligence with other entities. On May 9 Bahamian, Turks
and Caicos, UK and US authorities met in Nassau to discuss
ideas for greater regional coordination and cooperation on
smuggling and trafficking issues that threaten the security
of source and receiving countries. Conference participants
wished to involve Haitian and Dominican authorities directly
in this dialog but believed that those governments are not
yet at a level enabling them to fully participate. A working
group has been formed to continue to work on practical
aspects of
such cooperation and this same group of countries will meet
again in Nassau in September to continue the dialog and
assess progress.


7. (C) Additional U.S. assistance could finance the following
ideas/projects which would assist Haiti in playing a more
productive security role in the region while building the GOH
capacity to address trafficking issues that adversely impact
the Caribbean.

-- Extend the naval cooperation program Operation Enduring
Friendship to include Haiti. Haiti is among the neediest in
the region yet can not now
benefit from this initiative to share assets and resources.

-- Extend Operation Bahamas Turks and Caicos (OPBAT) to
include Hispaniola.

-- Provide additional maritime assets -- including parts,
maintenance, and training on such equipment -- to allow the
HCG to operate along all coastal waters as well as on the
inland lake that borders the DR, amajor route for land border
smuggling.

-- Continue to upgrade GOH port facilities and equipment to
better screen cargo.

-- Encourage greater cross-border cooperation with the GODR
border forces, including joint training and exchange
postings. This same approach should be taken with other
island nations, in particular the Bahamas and the Turks and
Caicos Islands.

-- Collect biometrics on all intercepts of humans in regional
waters.

-- Assist countries to draft and implement legislation
banning wooden hull sail freighters from international waters
as both a safety and security risk.

-- Assist countries to draft and implement legislation
criminalizing all forms of trafficking, including people
smuggling. Provide assistance, training and equipment to all
parts of the penal chain including police, HCG, prosecutors
and judges to ensure prosecution of offenders.

-- Increase training visits by the US Coast Guard and
Department of Homeland Security to continue to upgrade
security of air, sea and land ports of entry.


8. (C) One of the most important tools Haiti lacks to
implement many of the above items is a nationwide
communication system for case and intelligence management for
the HNP that would include the capability to interconnect
with other countries' crime databases, including USG

PORT AU PR 00000762 003.2 OF 003


databases and programs such as the FBI,s Integrated
Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) and ATF,s
Etrace system for tracking weapons. Haiti has expressed
interest in such interconnectivity and cooperation but is
technologically incapable of taking
advantage of these systems at this time. Such a system could
also include case management that would allow real-time
sharing of information and extend far
beyond the radio-based system now in place to facilitate
communication between police stations. Extensive training on
such a system would also be necessary.

Disaster Preparedness Assistance to Haiti
--------------


9. (SBU) USAID also supports Haiti in disaster preparedness.
Programs are designed to provide institutional support and
capacity-building in disaster early warning, response and
mitigation. These activities are coordinated with other
international donors. In 2007, USAID support helped develop
a National System for Disaster and Risk Management.
Cooperation of the GOH has been excellent on these
initiatives. With USG assistance, the GOH identified a site
for the construction of a new Emergency Operations Center
(EOC) on which construction has already begun. With help
from the USAID Famine Early
Warning System Network (FEWSNET),Haiti,s National Food
Security Coordination Agency staff has been trained on how to
coordinate and conduct population, food security and
vulnerability assessments.

Assistance Levels for Disaster Preparedness
--------------


10. (SBU) USAID is providing USD 2,534,510 to Haiti for
disaster preparedness through the following partnerships:

--U.S. NGO-ACDI/VOCA Food for Peace Title II Development
Food Aid Program 278,000

--Catholic Relief Services (CRS) Food for Peace Title II
Development Food Aid Program $236,510

--Chemonics Inc/Famine Early Warning System $400,000

--UNDP GOH/Capacity building of local disaster strategy
process $250,000

--World Vision (WVI) Food for Peace Title II Development
Food Aid Program
$1,220,000

--Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance $150,000


U.S. Coast Guard Assistance to Haitian Coast Guard
-------------- --------------


11. (C) The Military Liaison Office (MLO) at post implements
U.S. Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and International
Military Education and Training (IMET) funding coordination
for the government of Haiti. Most of the FMF and IMET funds
are used to support the Haitian Coast Guard (HGC),which is
not a military organization but a maritime arm of the Haitian
National Police. Most FMF cases address boat and facility
maintenance. MLO recently assisted other USG partner
agencies in providing six boats to the HGC to expand their
capabilities and strengthen their ties with the USG.
Approximately USD 152,000 in IMET funding has been designated
to the GOH for 2008. The Haitian Coast Guard is cooperative
in security matters but currently lacks the capacity to be an
effective security agent.
TIGHE