The police contingent, which Kenya’s interior ministry said earlier included 144 officers, was greeted at the international airport in Port-au-Prince by interim Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aime and Leslie Voltaire, head of Haiti’s presidential transition council.
It’s the second foreign contingent to arrive in just a few days, following 60 Salvadoran officers on Tuesday.
Kenya is leading the mission, which aims to help Haiti’s national police push back against gangs which control large parts of the country, including the majority of the capital.
Nairobi previously sent 400 officers in December and over 200 last month — with the latest reinforcements bringing the total to around 1,000.
Despite the deployment, Haiti continues to suffer from crippling instability due to rampant gang violence.
On Monday, the capital was once again plunged into panic following threats made by influential gang leader Jimmy Cherizier, known as “Barbecue.”
In the Kenscoff area in the capital region, a series of armed attacks have left at least 150 dead in recent days, according to a provisional toll released by the FJKL rights group.
Last year, at least 5,601 people were killed in gang-related violence, a thousand more than in 2023, according to the UN. The UN also recorded 315 lynchings of people allegedly affiliated with gangs as well as 281 cases of alleged summary executions by police.
Gang violence has forced many Haitians to flee their homes, with the UN’s migration agency putting the figure of displaced people around the country at over a million.
The future of the security mission was thrown into disarray for a short period this week after the US government moved to cut off aid as part of a larger halt to international funding under President Donald Trump.
But Secretary of State Marco Rubio later issued a waiver so that funding for the Haiti mission would proceed.