Colombian President Gustavo Petro arrives in Haiti, second visit this year
Published in News & Features
Months after making his first visit to Haiti, Colombian President Gustavo Petro returned Friday — this time landing in a gang-ridden Port-au-Prince accompanied by two of his top ministers in an aircraft stamped Republic of Colombia.
Petro was received by members of Haiti’s embattled Transitional Presidential Council upon his arrival at the Toussaint Louverture International Airport. His visit coincides with the official opening of Colombia’s new embassy in the Haitian capital. It also comes ahead of Colombia’s July 20th Independence Day — a milestone that was facilitated by Haiti, which provided arms and soldiers to help in its liberation and that of Venezuela, Ecuador and Panama from under Spanish rule.
That historical significance is driving a strategic shift by Petro, who amid mounting domestic challenges at home and frayed relations with the Trump administration, is pushing renewed engagement and rapprochement with Haiti, where armed groups control most of the capital and 17 Colombian mercenaries remain jailed in the 2021 assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.
With less than 10 months remaining in his presidential term, the former guerrilla member and leftist president is grappling with allegations of drug addiction by an ex-minister, growing rifts within in his cabinet and the expansion of illegal arms groups throughout the country. Meanwhile, he’s been accused of undermining relations with Colombia’s biggest security and trading partner, the United States, in his frequent clashes with President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio on their foreign policy.
“Petro has burned his bridges in Washington and a trip to Haiti is not going to absolve his past indiscretions nor his eagerness to constantly lambaste the U.S. and its leaders at every turn,” said Eddy Acevedo, a national security and foreign policy expert in Washington, D.C.
Petro’s visit was announced on Thursday by Prime Minister Alix Dider Fils-Aimé, who began the week preparing for a visit by Colombia’s defense minister. That visit was to focus on the military training of about 1,000 Haitians in Colombia and an agreement between the two nations over arms purchases, several sources told the Miami Herald.
But quickly it turned into an official visit by Petro, who wanted to visit Port-au-Prince as far back as last August but nixed the trip after then-Prime Minister Garry Conille informed him Haiti’s stretched police forces could not accommodate his large delegation while also trying to battle gangs.
In January, Petro finally got his wish. But instead of flying into the capital, he flew to Jacmel, the southeastern Haitian port city that in 1806 and 1816 launched the freedom movements of Francisco de Miranda and Simón Bolívar as they sough to liberate South America from Spanish rule. During the historic visit the two nations agreed on several areas of cooperation that sources say are supposed to be ironed out during the visit, which includes Petro spending the night in the country at an area hotel.
For Petro, who decided at the last minute to make the trip previously scheduled by his defense minister, Haiti has become both a symbolic and strategic opportunity that analysts say, he believes can elevate his international stature as a champion of social justice and potentially improve his strained relationship with Washington.
Since taking office earlier this year, Rubio has repeatedly called for greater regional involvement in Haiti’s ongoing multi-dimensional and complex crises. While he’s steered clear of publicly naming countries, Rubio’s remarks have been interpreted by analysts as a call to Latin American nations, most of which, apart from El Salvador and Guatemala, have yet to contribute troops or funding to the multinational security force supporting Haiti’s embattled police force in its fight against gangs.
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