Stabroek News

Haiti gang leader launches 'revolution' as violence escalates

-

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) - One of Haiti's most powerful gang leaders warned this week he was launching a revolution against the country's business and political elites, signaling a likely further escalation of violence in the impoverish­ed Caribbean nation.

Violence has spiked in Haiti's capital in recent weeks to what the United Nations has called "unpreceden­ted levels" as rival groups battle with one another or the police for control of the streets, displacing thousands and worsening the country's humanitari­an crisis.

Jimmy Cherizier, alias Barbecue, a former police officer, heads the so-called G9 federation of nine gangs formed last year.

Surrounded by gang members wielding machetes and guns, he gave a statement to local media outlets in the slum of La Saline on Wednesday, saying the G9 had become a revolution­ary force to deliver Haiti from the opposition, the government and the Haitian bourgeoisi­e.

Human rights activists say Cherizier is actually not targeting the government but the opposition.

The government has not publicly commented on his statements and was not immediatel­y available for comment.

A suspect in several massacres of citizens in recent years, among other crimes for which he was sanctioned late last year by the United States, Cherizier depicts himself as a community leader filling the void left by weak institutio­ns.

Cherizier said his gang members sparked the looting at multiple stores in Port-au-Prince last week, and the broader population followed suit because they were hungry.

"It is your money which is in banks, stores, supermarke­ts and dealership­s, so go and get what is rightfully yours," he said in comments that went viral on social media in Haiti.

Armed groups have become increasing­ly powerful in Haiti in recent years due to political unrest, growing poverty and a sense of impunity, say rights organizati­ons like the nonprofit Center for Human Rights Analysis and Research.

The presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections slated for later this year could be a factor for the recent uptick in violence committed by gangs often linked to local politician­s, they say.

Haiti's police is not equipped to deal with gang members who have acquired ever more sophistica­ted weapons, partly financed with kidnapping­s for ransom https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/descent-into-hell-kidnapping-explosion-terrorizes-haiti-2021-04-26.

Many officers have died in confrontat­ions with armed bandits https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/gangs-raid-police-stations-weaponshai­ti-deadly-violence-surges-2021-06-07 in recent months, including one in a fight with Cherizier last weekend, according to the police.

The violence is exacerbati­ng a humanitari­an crisis in a country in which nearly half the population is facing "high acute" food insecurity https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/acute-malnutriti­on-surging-amonghaiti­an-children-unicef-warns-2021-0531, according to the United Nations, and coronaviru­s infections are surging.

 ?? Jimmy Cherizier ??
Jimmy Cherizier

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana