The
reopening of the Toussaint-Louverture airport in the capital of Port-au-Prince
is expected to help ease a critical shortage of medications and other basic
supplies. The country’s main seaport remains badly affected. Gangs control 80%
of the capital.
U.S.-based airlines are not expected to
start using the airport until late May or early June.
The
first commercial passenger flight since March left for Miami nearly two hours
behind schedule, with sweating passengers complaining to local carrier Sunrise
Airways about the lack of air conditioning until takeoff.
Before
Monday, the sole airport operating in Haiti was located in the north coastal
city of Cap-Haitien. It was out of reach for many seeking to flee the country,
with roads leading from Port-au-Prince controlled by gangs that have opened
fire on cars and buses passing through.
The U.S. government had evacuated hundreds of citizens by helicopter out of a
hilly neighborhood in Port-au-Prince, as did nonprofit organizations, as gangs
laid siege to parts of the capital.
The
attacks began on Feb. 29, with gunmen seizing control of police stations,
opening fire on the Port-au-Prince airport and storming Haiti’s two biggest
prisons, freeing more than 4,000 inmates.
Gangs
since then have directed their attacks on previously peaceful communities,
leaving thousands homeless.
The
attack on the airport also left former Prime Minister Ariel Henry locked out of
Haiti since he was on an official trip to Kenya. He has since resigned, and a
transitional presidential council is seeking a new prime minister. It is also
tasked with selecting a new Cabinet and organizing general elections.In recent weeks, U.S. military planes have
landed at the Port-au-Prince airport with supplies as well as civilian
contractors to help Haiti prepare for the arrival of foreign forces expected to
help quell the gang violence.
On
Sunday, Kenya’s foreign affairs principal secretary, KorirSing’oei, said a plan
to deploy police officers from the East African country was in final stages.
“I can
tell you for sure that deployment will happen in the next few days, few weeks,”
he said.
In
March, Kenya and Haiti signed agreements to try to salvage a plan for the
country to deploy 1,000 police officers to the troubled Caribbean nation. Other
countries expected to back up Kenyan forces include the Bahamas, Barbados,
Benin, Chad and Bangladesh. It wasn’t immediately clear when those would
arrive.