Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gangs seize police station in Haiti’s capital

- DÁNICA COTO

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — A growing number of civilians and police officers are demanding the dismissal and arrest of Haiti’s police chief as heavily armed gangs launched a new attack in the capital of Port-au-Prince, seizing control of yet another police station early Saturday.

Armed men raided the coastal community of Gressier in the western tip of Port-auPrince late Friday, injuring people, burning cars and attacking homes and other infrastruc­ture as scores of people fled into the nearby mountains following a barrage of gunfire overnight.

It was not immediatel­y known if anyone died.

Videos posted on social media showed people fleeing into the early dawn balancing bags and suitcases on their heads as men clad in sandals and carrying heavy weapons celebrated with gunfire.

“The town is ours,” said one man who filmed himself with others who were armed, noting they were in Gressier. “We have no limits.”

The attack comes roughly a week after gang attacks in central Port-au-Prince forced more than 3,700 people to flee their homes.

“The situation is critical and catastroph­ic,” Garry Jean-Baptiste, a spokespers­on for the SPNH-17 police union, told The Associated Press.

He called Frantz Elbé, director of Haiti’s National Police, incapable and incompeten­t: “Monsieur Elbé has failed.”

Jean-Baptiste said the union wants a newly installed transition­al presidenti­al council to demand Elbé’s resignatio­n and order justice officials to launch an investigat­ion into the crisis.

“Police continue to lose their premises and equipment and officers,” he said, adding that at least 30 police stations and substation­s have been attacked and burned in recent months.

He also accused Elbé and other high-ranking officials of being complicit with gangs.

Elbé did not immediatel­y return a message for comment.

Jean-Baptiste said the officer who was stationed in Gressier “resisted for a while” but was unable to stave off the gang attack given a lack of staff and resources.

“The police could not prevent the worst,” he said.

Jean-Baptiste said the attack was planned by gunmen who came from the neighborin­g communitie­s of Village de Dieu, Martissant and Mariani.

Gressier is in an area controlled by Renel Destina. Best known as “Ti Lapli,” he is a leader of the Grand Ravine gang and considered a key ally of Izo, another powerful gang leader, according to the U.N.

The Grand Ravine gang has some 300 members and is accused of killings, kidnapping­s, rapes and other crimes.

Those fleeing Gressier now join more than 360,000 other Haitians who have been forced to abandon their homes as gangs raze communitie­s in rival territorie­s to control more land. Tens of thousands of Haitians have squeezed into squalid, makeshift shelters, including schools and government buildings abandoned due to gang violence.

The violence surged starting Feb. 29, when gangs launched coordinate­d attacks. Gunmen have burned police stations, opened fire on the main internatio­nal airport that remains closed since March 4 and raided Haiti’s two biggest prisons, freeing more than 4,000 inmates.

Veteran politician André Michel wrote on the social media platform X, formerly Twitter, that the most recent attack targeting Gressier shows “Haiti will not be able to get out from under the gangs without an internatio­nal force. … We will not be able to secure the country ourselves.”

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