The freshly deployed Kenyan police officers began patrolling Port-au-Prince as part of a UN-backed mission to battle armed gangs that have taken over the capital.
The team toured streets and the main port there on Friday amid reports Haitian Prime Minister Garry Conille left Port-au-Prince on Friday to travel to Washington and New York.
The team held joint patrols in the areas with local officers to ensure familiarity and calm, officials said.
Conille's office said he would travel with Foreign Minister Dominique Dupuy, Finance Minister Ketleen Florestal and Chief of Staff Nesmy Manigat, while Justice Minister Carlos Hercule would stay as acting prime minister on his behalf.
"The delegation will have important work meetings with officials from international financial institutions, among others. It will also inspect Haiti's embassy in Washington," the office said, without giving further details.
The US is the principal financial backer of a Kenya-led international security force the United Nations has ratified be sent to Haiti to help its police battle armed gangs that have plunged the country into a humanitarian crisis.
Haiti's former government first requested the force in 2022 and the first deployment of Kenyan police arrived this week.
As police patrolled the city in black armoured vans, Port-au-Prince residents said they hoped the force could stop the indiscriminate killings and allow the business to restart.
"We need peace. If the Kenyan police forces are here, it's so we can return to the lives we used to have. We hope they've come to work seriously," said resident Kloud Dine.
"We need the Kenyans here because the gang members make us suffer too much," added Louise Baret, a painter according to local media.
Over half a million people have fled their homes due to the violence and around half the population is going hungry.
More than 200 of the 400 first group of Kenya police arrived in Haiti on June 25.
Kenya, which is leading the 2,500-member security force, has agreed with the Haitian government on rules of engagement for the security personnel, who could face fierce opposition from the well-armed Haitian gangs that have taken over the country’s capital and overwhelmed local police.
More than 1,000 police officers will join other teams in deploying to Haiti to fight gangs terrorizing locals.
Apart from Kenya, other countries that will send officers to Haiti are Chile, Jamaica, Grenada, Paraguay, Burundi, Chad, Nigeria and Mauritius.