Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Help Haiti, U.N. urges nations

Troops can end gangs’ ‘living nightmare,’ rights chief says

- DANICA COTO AND EVENS SANON

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The U.N.’s human rights chief Friday urged the internatio­nal community to consider deploying a specialize­d armed force to Haiti, warning that violent gangs are creating a “living nightmare” for thousands of people.

The appeal from U.N. Human Rights Commission­er Volker Turk came at the end of a two-day visit to Haiti at the request of a government unable to control gangs that are killing, raping and pillaging in a growing number of neighborho­ods. Violence has spiked in the impoverish­ed country since the July 2021 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise.

“It is time for the internatio­nal community to help the Haitian authoritie­s regain full control so this suffering can be stopped,” Turk said.

He added that since multiple crises around the world are competing for attention, he fears that “the situation in Haiti is not receiving the urgent spotlight that it deserves.”

Shortly after Turk held a news conference, the United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti released a 24-page report on what it described as mass incidents of murder, gang rapes and sniper attacks in Cite Soleil, Haiti’s biggest slum. It is in the capital of Port-au-Prince.

“The findings of this report are horrifying,” Turk said. “It paints a picture of how people are being harassed and terrorized by criminal gangs for months without the state being able to stop it.”

From July 8, 2022, to Dec. 31, 2002, the report states that at least 263 people were killed and at least 57 women and girls were raped in just one neighborho­od within Cite Soleil known as Brooklyn. That area became ground zero for intense fighting between warring gangs.

During that time, the United Nations Integrated Office reported that residents lived in “an almost permanent climate of terror due to the use of snipers that killed, at random, any person who passed in their field of vision.”

Officials added that snipers would stand on schools and other buildings during broad daylight to attack innocent residents, with an average of six people killed or wounded every week. Among the targets were at least 17 women and several children — the youngest just 8 years old.

Gang members also entered houses at random in rival territory, killing at least 95 people this way, including six children, one of whom was 2 years old, the report said. People who tried to flee the violence were killed at makeshift checkpoint­s.

Officials noted that three men were killed by one gang leader because they had been talking about the possibilit­y of foreign military interventi­on, which Prime Minister Ariel Henry urgently requested in October to no avail amid a fuel terminal siege that shuttered gas stations and crippled life in Haiti.

The report blamed the violence on at least eight gangs, including Haiti’s largest one — G9 Family and Allies, which is a gang federation led by former police officer Jimmy Cherizier. It has been accused of blocking access to food and water in part by damaging public water mains and threatenin­g to kill water truck drivers if they went to certain neighborho­ods.

As a result, the first cholera deaths in nearly three years were recorded in October 2022 in the Brooklyn neighborho­od, officials said.

In a recent interview with

The Associated Press, Cherizier denied the accusation­s, saying he is simply carrying out a “social fight.”

The report said warring gangs use weapons including assault rifles illegally smuggled into Haiti and even rely on motorboats to attack rivals. The wave of violence has displaced tens of thousands of Haitians who remain homeless after their homes were bulldozed or set on fire, the report read.

The U.N. office urged local officials to hold elections, provide more training and equipment to a severely understaff­ed police department and arrest those responsibl­e for “gross human rights abuses.”

It also once again called on the internatio­nal community to urgently consider the deployment of foreign troops.

“The issues are vast and overwhelmi­ng,” Turk said. “They need the internatio­nal community’s attention.”

 ?? (AP/Odelyn Joseph) ?? United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Volker Turk (center) gives a press conference
Friday in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
(AP/Odelyn Joseph) United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Volker Turk (center) gives a press conference Friday in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

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