Haiti's Police Union Wants Security to Be a Top Priority for Presidential Transitional Council

Haiti's Police Union Wants Security to Be a Top Priority for Presidential Transitional Council

PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti – The National Union of Haitian Police Officers (SYNAPOHA) is calling on the recently installed Presidential Transitional Council (CPT) to give priority to security issues in the country.

Members of the nine-member CPT were sworn into office last Thursday  that the regional integration movement CARICOM said “marks a significant achievement through a process driven by Haitians in the interest of Haiti.

“It also represents a critical step forward for both the Council and the Haitian people in addressing the protracted multidimensional crisis afflicting the country,” the 15-member grouping added.

CPT member, Regine Abraham, said the CPT  will launch five major projects, including “the  restoration of public security; the holding of a national conference and of a constitutional reform; the organization of democratic, credible and participative general elections”.

In a statement posted on its X account, formally Twitter, the SYNAPOHA said it hopes that the CPT will give priority to security issues.

It is also calling for providing the Haitian National Police (PNH) with adequate means to combat armed gangs in the country.

The situation also remains volatile at the national port, saidUN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric over the weekend as the criminal gangs, which control most of the capital, Port au Prince,  continue to wage war against the authorities.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) says it “is deeply concerned” about the impact of violence on hospitals and health centers in the metropolitan area of Port-au-Prince, where less than 50 per cent of establishments are operating at capacity normal.

The WHO said that those that remain functional lack supplies and that “this means people are deprived of access to basic healthcare.

“There is an urgent need for the international community to increase its support and funding so that vital services can be provided and essential supplies delivered.”

Last Saturday, a US Air Force C-130 flight landed at Toussaint Louverture International Airport in Port-au-Prince, with the delivery of humanitarian aid from the Denton programme, the fourth such flight in the past week.

The cargo contained nearly 10 tons of vital medicines for the Haitian people which were donated by the non-governmental organizations “MAP International” and “Lift Logistics” and “Hope for Haiti”.

These medications and medical supplies will be distributed to 14 partners who treat more than 205,000 patients each year. These NGOs work closely with the Ministry of Public Health (MSPP) and organize mobile clinics under their direction and administer vaccines to children.