United Nations peacekeepers in Haiti have launched an operation to take control of one of the most violent slums in the capital, Port-au-Prince. Hundreds of troops moved into the Cite Soleil district by land, sea and air. The UN says they will stay for at least two months before handing control to local police. After which it will return to being a violent slum. | Cite Soleil is a stronghold of the former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's supporters, and often witnesses factional violence. Dozens of people are said to have been killed since fighting increased in early September in the area, home to 500,000 people. Haiti's interim government has criticised UN forces for failing to do enough to stop the anarchy. Quagmire! Doom! Rumsfeld didn't send enough troops to prevent looting..........oops, sorry, wrong quagmire | A UN spokesman said peacekeepers would now establish a permanent presence in the troubled quarter. Brazilian, Chilean and Sri Lankan troops took part in the operation, backed by the Chilean air force, as well as Chinese and Jordanian riot police, he said. Have the Chinese driven a tank over anyone yet? | "This operation will create an environment in which Cite Soleil can open again to humanitarian action," he said. Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, is still in turmoil after Mr Aristide was ousted in February. Yeah, it was heaven on earth when Aristide was still in power. |
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