U.S. officials had previously indicated that the officers would
be in Port-au-Prince by Thursday to coincide with Kenyan
President William Ruto's state visit to the White House.
Kenya volunteered to lead the mission last July but has faced
repeated delays deploying due to litigation brought by opponents
of the government's plan and a surge of violence in March that
led the Haitian prime minister to resign.
The mission, which will comprise up to 2,500 personnel, is
intended to counter gangs who control most of Port-au-Prince and
have carried out widespread killings, kidnappings and sexual
violence.
Kenya has committed 1,000 police officers to the U.N.-approved
mission, most of which is being financed by the United States.
Two hundred Kenyan officers assigned to the mission were told
they would fly out of Nairobi on Tuesday evening, the two
sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss
sensitive information.
One source, a former police officer in contact with members of
the mission, said the officers were given no explanation for the
last-minute delay and were told to remain on standby.
The other source, who was briefed by a government official, said
conditions were not in place in Port-au-Prince to receive the
officers.
Kenya's government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
(Reporting by Aaron Ross; Editing by Alison Williams)
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