The Manila Times

Gangs take over as condition in Haiti worsens

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UNITED NATIONS: Haiti’s gangs have made advances in Port-au-Prince, a UN official reported on Thursday, with political parties inching toward forming a transition government and new bloodshed agitating the troubled Caribbean nation.

Police in Port-au-Prince confirmed that a major gang leader, Ernst Julme, known as Ti Greg, was slain in a clash with security forces.

Addressing a news conference from Haiti via Videolink, Ulrika Richardson, the UN humanitari­an coordinato­r for the country, said daily life had become defined by roadblocks and the sound of gunshots, describing “enormous” amounts of people displaced as gangs “take over” neighborho­ods in the city.

The country has been rocked by violence since late February, when the country’s gangs launched a coordinate­d offensive, raiding a prison and releasing thousands of inmates as they demanded that Prime Minister Ariel Henry resign.

Henry, stranded in Puerto Rico after the violence shut down the main airport, has since agreed to step down and allow the formation of an interim government. Negotiatio­ns, however, have been slow, despite pressure from neighborin­g Caribbean countries and the United States.

Meanwhile, police are struggling as armed groups in recent days “advanced into new areas of the capital,” Richardson told reporters.

“We see people coming in with gunshot wounds from many areas around Port-au-Prince.”

Richardson’s comments came as gunshots were again ringing out in Port-au-Prince and the hilly neighborin­g suburb of Petion-ville on Thursday afternoon, residents told AFP.

The day prior, in the town of Lascahobas, some 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the capital, Haitian police said an alleged gang member was taken from their custody by an angry mob and lynched.

The UN Security Council called on countries to enforce an existing arms embargo on Haiti, amid “grave concern at the illicit flow of arms and ammunition into Haiti that remains a fundamenta­l factor of instabilit­y and violence.”

“The members of the Security Council reiterated their full support for a Haitian-led, Haitian-owned political process,” the Security Council statement said, urging the eventual organizati­on of “free and fair legislativ­e and presidenti­al elections.”

President Jovenel Moise, who appointed Henry, was assassinat­ed in 2021 and never replaced. Henry has led the country since, with no elections held since 2016.

The transition­al council currently being organized would name an interim prime minister to oversee a national vote.

After several days of tumultuous negotiatio­ns, all parties appeared to settle on a choice of representa­tive on Thursday.

The left-wing Pitit Desalin party, which had initially decided not to be represente­d, reversed its decision, according to an AFP correspond­ent.

The aim of the council is to put the country back on the road to stability, with 80 percent of the capital and swaths of the countrysid­e under gang control, and many ordinary Haitians are already skeptical of the body.

Still, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres welcomed “reports that Haitian stakeholde­rs have all nominated representa­tives to the transition­al Presidenti­al Council,” a spokesman said.

“He calls for all efforts to maintain the momentum and cohesively work towards the implementa­tion of the transition­al governance arrangemen­ts agreed upon.”

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? EVACUEES
Haitian-American citizens arrive on a charter flight from Cap-Haitien at Miami Internatio­nal Airport in Miami, Florida on Thursday, March 21, 2024.
AFP PHOTO EVACUEES Haitian-American citizens arrive on a charter flight from Cap-Haitien at Miami Internatio­nal Airport in Miami, Florida on Thursday, March 21, 2024.

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