Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti (French: Mission des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation en Haïti), also known as MINUSTAH, an acronym of its French name, was a UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti from 2004 to 2017.
The United Nations Mission in Haiti (UNMIH) was a peacekeeping operation carried out by the United Nations between September 1993 and June 1996. The Mission was reestablished in April 2004, after a rebellion took over most of Haiti and President Bertrand Aristide resigned. [1]
The Multinational Security Support (MSS) Mission in Haiti is an international police and military force approved by the United Nations Security Council on 2 October 2023 to assist the government of Haiti in restoring law and order amid worsening civil strife and gang violence since 2018.
The United Nations Security Council on Monday unanimously renewed a multinational security support mission (MSS) in Haiti to combat armed gangs after the U.S. dropped a push to enlarge the effort ...
Haiti's U.N. Ambassador Antonio Rodrigue told the council that transforming the security mission into a U.N. peacekeeping operation "appears not just to be necessary, but a matter of urgency ...
The United States has dropped a push for the U.N. Security Council to ask for a plan to transform a security mission helping fight armed gangs in Haiti into a formal U.N. peacekeeping operation, a ...
The United Nations Transition Mission in Haiti (UNTMIH) was a four-month mission which took place between 30 July 1997 and 30 November 1997. UNTMIH was the third United Nations peacekeeping operation in Haiti, [1] and was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1123, adopted on 30 July 1997.
Seven years after the last United Nations peacekeepers departed amid warnings they would soon be back, Haiti is now officially asking for their return. Haiti asks for UN peacekeeping mission as ...