Taipei Times

UN warns of malnutriti­on in Haiti

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Haiti’s capital is almost completely cut off by air, sea and land blockades as gang violence intensifie­s, stopping aid from getting to 58,000 children with the most life-threatenin­g form of malnutriti­on, the head of the UN children’s agency said on Monday.

UNICEF executive director Catherine Russell said twothirds of Haiti’s children need aid, women and girls are being targeted with “extreme levels” of gender-based and sexual violence, and 30 to 50 percent of armed groups have children in their ranks.

“The situation in Haiti is catastroph­ic, and it grows worse by the day,” Russell told the UN Security Council.

“Port-au-Prince is now almost completely sealed off because of air, sea and land blockades,” she said.

The nation is preparing for the installati­on of a nine-member council to take over from Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who pledged to step down on March 11 while stranded outside the nation and under pressure from the US.

Haiti’s gangs, many of which have grouped together under an alliance known as Viv Ansanm (Living Together), have said their siege on the capital was a battle to oust Henry, but since his announceme­nt there has been little letup in attacks.

The gangs were fighting police around the National Palace on Monday, local media reported.

The transition­al council is set to be installed in the palace, though the date has yet to be confirmed.

“Since March 8, close to 100,000 Haitians have left Portau-Prince for the regions, escaping gang violence in search of security,” UN special envoy on Haiti Maria Isabel Salvador told the UN Security Council.

“Food insecurity also remains rampant across the country, with half of the population suffering from severe food insecurity,” she said, adding that a UN appeal for US$674 million for this year was only 8 percent funded.

Operations at Haiti’s main fuel import terminal were suspended on Monday as armed men seized trucks and demanded the port be shut down, according to a source with informatio­n on the matter.

Armed gangs blocked the Varreux terminal for nearly a month in October 2021, and again a year later for more than a month, halting most economic activities and prompting the government to call for foreign interventi­on.

“They are running out of fuel,” World Food Programme deputy executive director Carl Skau, who visited Haiti over the weekend, said earlier on Monday.

“There’s a ship coming. If that can dock and unload then they are safe, but we are talking about days until they run out,” he said.

With most businesses unable to maintain power without their diesel generators, under the previous blockades hospitals were forced to shut down, radio stations stopped programmin­g, mobile antennas ran out of fuel and transport was brought to a halt.

The UN Security Council in October last year authorized a foreign security mission to Haiti, but the mission, which Kenya has stepped forward to lead, has not yet deployed amid legal and funding issues.

Russell said that given the security mission would likely be deployed in dense urban environmen­ts, “the safety of the civilian population is paramount.”

“The use of force in and around populated areas must be avoided, and the mission must only use the least harmful means that are necessary and proportion­ate to the legitimate law enforcemen­t objective,” she said.

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