The Daily Telegraph

Haiti gangs launch airport siege to stop PM returning

- By Simeon Tegel

ARMED gangs attempted to storm Haiti’s main airport yesterday as bloodshed and chaos in the stricken Caribbean nation lurched out of control.

Criminals cut a hole through the fence of the Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport before being forced back by gunfire from security forces. The airport was closed when the attack occurred but journalist­s from the Associated Press saw an armoured truck shooting at gangs from the tarmac to keep them back. Soldiers were deployed to the airport after gangs began a violent campaign to seize state institutio­ns on Thursday. Three domestic aircraft were struck when gangs opened fire at the airport last week.

On Sunday, about 3,600 prisoners were broken out of the country’s largest prison. The gangs, led by the warlord and former policeman Jeremy “Barbecue” Chérizier, have been targeting government facilities, including police stations, as they seek to take total control of the country of 11 million.

They have been terrorisin­g the population for years, robbing, extorting and also frequently raping Haitians, destroying any possibilit­y of normalcy or prosperity for citizens. Now they want to stop Ariel Henry, the prime minister, returning from Kenya. He has been negotiatin­g a deal for more than 1,000 Kenyan police officers to deploy to Haiti as part of a United Nationsspo­nsored peacekeepi­ng force.

Mr Henry, who cancelled elections scheduled for February because of the security breakdown, is unpopular among many Haitians for failing to tackle the gang violence.

US airlines suspended all flights to Haiti on Monday while Luis Abinader, the president of the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, said his country was speeding up the constructi­on of a fence and implementi­ng “extreme security” measures along the 150-mile border.

Mr Abinader also ruled out accepting Haitian refugees over concerns the Dominican Republic, a popular tourist destinatio­n, could be overwhelme­d.

About 15,000 people are believed to have been displaced in the past five days by the fierce fighting in and around the Haitian capital, Port-au-prince.

The UN Security Council approved a peacekeepi­ng mission to Haiti in October. But the initiative has been plagued by reluctance from some nations, especially the United States and in Europe, to get involved.

So far, only $11million (£8.7million) has been raised for the force, which is now expected to comprise troops from Caribbean and African states.

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