Lodi News-Sentinel

Dominican diplomat kidnapped in Haiti as gangs clash

- Jacqueline Charles

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — A diplomat assigned to the Dominican Republic’s Port-au-Prince embassy is Haiti’s latest kidnapping victim, a senior Haitian government official has confirmed.

Carlos Guillén Tatis was traveling through a gang stronghold and site of ongoing violence by warring armed gangs on Friday when he was reportedly abducted while on his way to the Haitian-Dominican border. Guillén Tatis works as an agricultur­al adviser in the Dominican embassy and is also reportedly a U.S. citizen.

As of late Monday, his whereabout­s remained unknown, said the source, confirming that the Haitian government was notified immediatel­y about the missing diplomat and officials in both countries have been in touch since the weekend.

Haiti and the Dominican Republic share the island of Hispaniola. Since a week ago Sunday, however, intensifyi­ng gang violence has disrupted the lives of thousands of individual­s living east of metropolit­an Port-au-Prince and made travel difficult between the Haitian border town of Malpasse and the neighborin­g city of Jimaní on the Dominican side.

The war involves the 400 Mawozo gang, which was behind last year’s kidnapping of 17 missionari­es with an Ohio-based charity, and Chen Mechan, a rival gang aligned with the G-9 gang coalition. Their clashes have killed at least 20 civilians, Haiti’s Office of Civil Protection said, and forced hundreds of Haitians from their homes in the combat zone. The volatile situation risks plunging Haiti into an even deeper humanitari­an crisis and further isolating Port-auPrince at a time when the capital is already cut off from four regional department­s in the south because of gang clashes at its southern entrance since June.

The area under siege includes thousands of acres in the fertile lowland known as the Plaine de Cul de Sac and the Croix-des-Bouquets prison, where a number of high profile inmates are jailed, including gang members and suspects in last July’s assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

Video images shared with the Miami Herald of one of the neighborho­ods under attack, Santo, show streets completely deserted.

Taking to Twitter Monday, the owner of Rhum Barbancour­t, Delphine Gardère, posted a photo of Haitians fleeing and tweeted: “Scene of war in front of Barbancour­t this morning ... the inhabitant­s of our community in Damien are women and children from the area who are fleeing under the bullets. @DrArielHen­ry what are you doing?!!!”

As Gardère’s tweet went viral, Haitian social media was flooded with photos of unidentifi­ed individual­s who had been lynched, their eyes gouged out. Haitian police did not respond to Herald calls to confirm reports that the individual­s killed in the nearby pine forest were gang members slain by the population after they reportedly attempted to move into the area.

This latest round of violence started after 400 Mawozo, known for its kidnapping of people by the car and busloads, attempted to take over parts of Chen Mechan’s territory in the area. The latter gang is said to focus on racketeeri­ng and extortion from businesses.

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