Haiti gang crisis: Kenyan police face taunts and scepticism as pressure mounts
Critics say the gang-busting mission has not done enough to reassure them.
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When the first contingent of 200 elite Kenyan police officers flew into Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince on 25 June, they filed confidently off their Kenyan Airways flight clad in helmets and combat gear, carrying their weapons and holding high the Kenyan national flag.
They chanted in Swahili while they psyched themselves up on the airport tarmac, as did a second batch of 200 Kenyan officers who landed three weeks later.
"Let's go!" and "We're moving!" came the cries.
Hopes were high that the Kenyan police would bring much-needed muscle to Haiti's beleaguered National Police (PNH), as they struggled to hold back a deadly offensive by Haitian criminal gangs that have terrorised the capital and large swathes of the country for more than three years.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9d11pyx971o
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