Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Americans urged to flee Haiti

Rising gang activity, decaying security raise U.S. alarm

- JACQUELINE CHARLES AND MICHAEL WILNER

The Biden administra­tion is urging U.S. citizens in Haiti “to strongly consider returning to the United States” amid a gang-aggravated fuel shortage and a deteriorat­ing security climate in which 17 Christian missionari­es, including 16 Americans, have been held hostage more than three weeks.

The message in a Friday security alert from the U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince came as Haiti’s commercial banks and other businesses announced reduced hours starting this week, grocery store owners warned of coming food shortages and the United Nations encouraged employees to stock up on emergency supplies of water, food and other essential items.

“The U.N. can confirm that a message was sent to all U.N. staff on 28 October strongly advising them, due to the prevailing security and fuel situation, to stock at least 14 days of emergency supplies of water, food and necessitie­s,” said Daniel Dickinson, a spokespers­on for the U.N.’s political office in Port-au-Prince. “This advice is in line with the U.N.’s security and contingenc­y planning.”

Americans are being encouraged to depart while commercial flights are still available, noting that while the security situation has been unpredicta­ble for months, the environmen­t has deteriorat­ed rapidly in recent days.

“It sounds like an abdication of any kind of responsibi­lity,” Robert Maguire, a longtime Haiti expert who once prepared U.S. diplomats being sent to Port-au-Prince, said of the responses of the U.S and the U.N. to the unfolding crisis, which is expected to get worse this week if authoritie­s don’t manage to supply fuel. “I think this administra­tion would prefer for Haiti to go away. But it’s not going to go away. It seems that there is no real unanimity of what to do in this administra­tion.”

A U.S. State Department spokespers­on said the welfare and safety of U.S. citizens abroad is the highest priority. The U.S. has been encouragin­g U.S. citizens for some time to avoid nonessenti­al travel to Haiti and saying those deciding to there should carefully consider the informatio­n available on travel.state.gov regarding the extremely high risk of kidnapping.

“Our Travel Advisory for Haiti is a Level 4: Do Not Travel due to kidnapping, crime, civil unrest, and COVID-19,” the spokespers­on said. “Kidnapping is widespread and victims regularly include U.S. citizens.”

Over the weekend, rampedup gang shootings in Port-au-Prince led to panic and deaths and further dashed hopes that fuel tankers would be able to get through gang-controlled territorie­s to access blocked distributi­on terminals.

A justice of the peace confirmed to Le Nouvellist­e, the country’s daily newspaper, the deaths of a 95-year-old woman and her driver Saturday as they crossed the community of Martissant, where there were other unconfirme­d reports of deaths during a gang rampage less than a half-hour away from the presidenti­al palace.

That same day, at the other end of the capital, in Croixdes-Bouquets, bandits opened fire on a vehicle, killing a child and injuring his father and older brother. The incident was confirmed by the Evangelica­l Theologica­l Seminary of Portau-Prince, which said that its student coordinato­r, Pastor Stanis Stifinson, was in the car with his children.

Since June, the violence has forced at least 19,000 people in metropolit­an Port-au-Prince to flee their homes and thousands of schoolchil­dren to interrupt their education, the U.N. said. The growing violence is also affecting the recovery efforts in the south of Haiti, where a 7.2-magnitude earthquake in August killed more than 2,200 people and left 800,000 in need of humanitari­an assistance.

Haitians say the crisis is the worst to hit the country since the the 1990s, when the internatio­nal community and the Clinton administra­tion maintained economic sanctions after a 1991 military coup toppled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

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