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Kenya disputes UN probe accusing Haiti mission of sexual abuse

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Kenya has disputed United Nations report

Kenya has disputed a United Nations (UN) report saying an investigation had found substantiated allegations of ​sexual abuse involving members of an UN, backed anti-gang ‌force in Haiti that is staffed mostly by Kenyan police officers.

In a report dated February 16 and first reported ​on last week, the UN said four allegations ​of sexual exploitation and abuse from last ⁠year against the force had been substantiated by ​its Human Rights Office.

In a letter to UN Secretary-General ​Antonio Guterres this week, Kenya’s Foreign Minister Musalia Mudavadi said the allegations had been looked into by a Kenyan ​board of inquiry and “found to be unsubstantiated”.

“Investigations conducted ​were impartial and shared with all relevant stakeholders, including UN human ‌rights ⁠offices,” Mudavadi wrote.

A UN representative in Kenya did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Thursday.

Kenya supplies most of the personnel to the ​roughly 1000-strong ​force, which ⁠first deployed in June 2024 to combat the gangs that control most of ​Haiti’s capital.

There were widespread sexual abuse ​and exploitation ⁠accusations, including allegations of child victims, against UN Peacekeepers under the  UN Stabilisation Mission in Haiti, Mission in Haiti mission in Haiti from 2004 ⁠to ​2017. Only a few peacekeepers ​were prosecuted by their home countries.

–Reuters–

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