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| Coast Guard Commission of Haiti Commissariat des Gardes-Côtes d’Haïti | |
|---|---|
Flag[1] | |
| Abbreviation | G-Cd'H |
| Agency overview | |
| Formed | 1997 |
| Employees | 200 |
| Jurisdictional structure | |
| National agency (Operations jurisdiction) | Haiti |
| Operations jurisdiction | Haiti |
| Legal jurisdiction | Haitian and international waters |
| Specialist jurisdiction |
|
| Operational structure | |
| Headquarters | Killick, Port-au-Prince |
| Agency executive |
|
| Parent agency | Haitian National Police |
The Haitian Coast Guard, officially the Haitian Coast Guard Commission (French: Commissariat des Gardes-Côtes d’Haïti; abbreviated G-Cd'H), is an operational unit of the Haitian National Police. It is one of the few law enforcement organisations in the world to combine water policing and coast guard duties while remaining as a policing unit. It operates primarily as a law enforcement agency, with secondary responsibilities in search and rescue.
The Haitian Coast Guard had its name changed several times. The Haitian Navy (Marine Haitienne) existed from 1860 until the U.S. occupation in 1915 and then again from 1970 until the U.S. Operation Restore Democracy in 1994. The Coast Guard was established in the late 1930s and was renamed as the Navy in 1970, before being abolished with the rest of the Armed Forces in 1994.[2] In 1997, the Haitian Coast Guard was recreated as a special unit in the Haitian National Police,[3] and since then it has received assistance in the form of training and equipment from the United States Coast Guard and the Canadian Coast Guard.[4]
The Haitian Coast Guard has four bases[1] along with eight patrol boats[5] and 200 personnel.[6] The Killick Coast Guard base at the harbor of Port-au-Prince is the headquarters of the Coast Guard, and it also has bases in Cap-Haïtien, Les Cayes, and Port-de-Paix.[1]
The Haitian Coast Guard was formed in the late 1930s, 20 years after the disbandment of the Haitian Navy, and was equipped with two small picket boats named 1 and 2 and the 161-ton Sans Souci. The latter was formerly the American yacht Captain James Taylor.
During World War II, six 83-foot cutters, named 1 through 6, were transferred from the US Coast Guard in 1942. Three 121-ton SC-class submarine chasers, Toussaint Louverture, 16 Aout 1946, and Amiral Killick, were transferred in 1947, along with the 47-ton cutter Savannah and the light transport Vertières. The two picket boats were withdrawn at this time.
In 1948, a US Naval Mission arrived in Haiti.
The transport Vertières sank in 1951 and was replaced by the Artibonite, a tank landing craft which had been previously wrecked on the Haitian coast and was subsequently salvaged.
The Coast Guard remained this way until the Admiral Killick was stricken in 1954 and was replaced by a US-sourced buoy tender given the same name in 1955. In 1956 a new 100-ton coast cutter, La Crête-à-Pierrot, was acquired from the United States. The two remaining submarine chasers were stricken in 1960 which is when the new Vertières, sister to the La Crête-à-Pierrot, was acquired. The US Navy netlayer USS Tonawanda, renamed Jean-Jacques Dessalines, arrived in 1960 for a five-year, extended to 17-year lease.
After the Armed Forces of Haiti were disbanded in 1995, the remnants of the Haitian Navy were transferred to the Coast Guard,[7] which was active from 1997 as part of the Haitian National Police, the agency that replaced the Armed Forces.[8] Since being reestablished, the Haitian Coast Guard received extensive support from the United States Coast Guard.[4] As of 2004, the U.S. spent $4.6 million on training Haitian personnel, providing them with boats, and restoring the Coast Guard base in Port-au-Prince.[9]
In the year 2000, the Coast Guard had 40 personnel and four Boston Whaler boats that were provided by the United States in 1996. The older ships from the Haitian navy were no longer operational. The Boston Whaler boats underwent a refit in Miami in 1999.[7]
As of 2011 there were 99 coast guardsmen. In 2015 the number of Coast Guard personnel increased to 150,[10] and as of 2019 it was 200.[6]
The marine police is exercised by a specialized unit of the National Police called the Commissariat des Gardes-Côtes d’Haïti.[1]
The core mission of the Coast Guard is to secure the maritime area of Haiti through surveillance of territorial waters and the safety of maritime navigation divided into these different functions:[11]
As of 2023:[5]
| Class | Origin | Quantity | Ships | Combat displacement | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coastal patrol craft | |||||
| 3812-VCF-class patrol boat | 3 | 15 tons | |||
| Dauntless-class patrol boat | 5 | 14 tons[11] | First two boats received in 2010 as part of a contract for five boats.[11] | ||
Haitian Coast Guard vessels are marked with a diagonal blue before red slash and before the words Gardes-Côtes. Coast Guard vessels are painted all-white.[11]