Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti

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The Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti (MSS) was authorized by the Security Council in resolution 2699 of 2 October 2023.

The mission is mandated "to support the efforts of the Haitian National Police to re-establish security in Haiti and build security conditions conducive to holding free and fair elections" by

  • Providing operational support to the Haitian National Police, including building its capacity through the planning and conduct of joint security support operations, and
  • Providing support for the provision of security for critical infrastructure sites and transit locations.

Although authorized by the Security Council, the MSS is not a UN peace operation and is not financed through UN assessed contributions. A UN trust fund was established to facilitate voluntary contributions to enable and operationalize the MSS mandate.[1] The UN is authorized to provide logistical support packages to the MSS subject to full financial reimbursement.[2]

Security Council resolutions

The Security Council has adopted several resolutions on the MSS mandate, as follows:

Resolution Date Notes
2699 (2023) 02 October 2023 Established the MSS for an initial period of 1 year
2751 (2024) 30 September 2024 Extended the mandate of the MSS to 02 October 2025

Pledges

The following member states have pledged personnel and capabilities to the MSS:

Member State Date Letter Contribution
Chad 03 October 2023 S/2024/263 Expressed readiness to contribute troops and formed police units (no specifics)
Bangladesh 10 January 2024 S/2024/263 Pledged personnel (no specifics)
Barbados 24 January 2024 S/2024/263 Pledged to provide security personnel (no specifics) and in-kind support in the form of training and capacity-building
Bahamas, The 26 January 2024 S/2024/263 Pledged 150 law enforcement personnel for joint operations and capacity building, as well as maritime, waterside and port security
Benin 28 February 2024 S/2024/224 Pledged 1,500 troops, with the possibility of increasing the number to 2,000
Jamaica 05 March 2024 S/2024/262 Pledged 170 members of the Jamaica Defense Force and 30 members of the Jamaica Constabulary Force
Kenya 11 March 2024 S/2024/262 Pledged to contribute personnel and leadership (no specifics)
Belize 01 May 2024 S/2024/393 Pledged 50 military personnel from the Belize Defense Force and Belize Coast Guard
Guatemala 24 June 2024 S/2024/535 Pledged one military police company and the use of the Regional Peace Operations Training Centre
El Salvador 13 August 2024 S/2024/678 Pledged 3 helicopters and 78 troops for medical evacuation (medevac) operations

References

  1. Security Council resolution 2699 (2023), paragraph 16
  2. Security Council resolution 2699 (2023), paragraph 17