Why were Colombian guns for hire allegedly key to Haiti assassination plot?
The hit squad that killed President Jovenel Moïse is alleged to be largely drawn from veterans of Colombias civil conflicts
Joe Parkin Daniels in Bogotá and Tom Phillips
Fri 9 Jul 2021 17.22 EDT
When Manuel Antonio Grosso Guarín jetted into Punta Canas tourist-clogged airport early last month on Avianca Flight 252, immigration officials are unlikely to have given the 41-year-old Colombian a second glance. Visitors from around the globe flock to this Dominican resort town each week in search of sun, sea and Caribbean sands.
Grosso appears to have had rather different plans, though: to sneak over the border into neighbouring Haiti and help assassinate that countrys president.
Colombian mercenaries: trained, cheap, and available, read a headline in Colombias largest newspaper, El Tiempo, on Friday after the Bogotá-based former special forces fighter was identified as one of Jovenel Moïses 28 alleged killers.
The presence of such a large number of foreigners among the Haitian leaders alleged murderers has shocked many, particularly in Haiti itself. But Colombian guns-for-hire have been turning up in war zones around the world, including Yemen, Iraq, Israel and Afghanistan, for years now.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/09/colombia-haiti-guns-for-hire-assassination
Many were once trained by American soldiers and, having spent years battling insurgent groups or drug traffickers within Colombia, go on to find work with US-based private military contractors.