Miami Herald

Violence erupts in Haiti during protests after gangs kill six cops

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Miami Herald Staff Writer Nora Gámez Torres contribute­d to this report.

The killing of six police officers in an attack against a police substation in Haiti’s Artibonite Valley sent parts of the country reeling Thursday as armed men claiming to be cops revolted in the streets, scouring the premises of Port-auPrince’s internatio­nal airport and the police headquarte­rs searching for the country’s prime minister.

The demonstrat­ions were tied to the arrival of Prime Minister Ariel Henry from Argentina, where he and a small delegation attended an internatio­nal conference and Henry again made a plea for foreign forces to assist his beleaguere­d government to take on heavily armed gangs.

As Henry’s American Airlines flight out of Miami landed at Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport, billows of dark smoke from burning tires could be seen. Protesters claiming to be police officers, but armed and dressed in plain clothes with their faces covered with scarfs or ski masks, made their way into several areas of the airport.

Video shared on social media also showed passengers inside the airport terminal skirmishin­g while workers on the tarmac ran to seek cover from the mob. At police headquarte­rs, shots were fired as some of the protesters breached the area.

The group made several attempts to breach the entrance to the airport. At a departure area, they pulled down blue metal gates used to separate vehicles dropping off passengers. At a VIP lounge, they pushed their way through a fence before getting into a skirmish with other police officers trying to secure the lounge entrance.

As the violence unfolded, Henry was elsewhere in the airport meeting with a visiting delegation.

The source of the anger was the death of six police officers in the Artibonite Valley, where a police substation suffered three attacks on Thursday.

In an interview with radio station Magik 9, the police chief for the Artibonite region, Bruce Myrtil, said “this was an attack that happened on all fronts.”

“The first attack was at 7 a.m., the second at 10 a.m. and the third shortly before noon,” Myrtil said.

Four of the officers, he said, were killed while getting treated for their injuries inside a clinic.

The killings came a week after three other police officers were killed in a gang ambush and a fourth went missing. That attack in the Pernier neighborho­od of Petionvill­e came during what a government official told the Miami Herald was an “authorized mission” to avenge the death of a fallen gang leader.

However, some officers believed their fellow cops died during an operation in which they asked for reinforcem­ents. They never came.

The suspected officers protesting on Thursday did not claim any affiliatio­n to any group. But their tactics, including using vehicles to block roads to the airport, were similar to those used by a rogue group of police officers known as Fantom 509.

The National Human Rights Defense Network of Haiti said at least 18 police officers have been “victims of acts detrimenta­l to their lives” since the start of the year. This includes 14 cops who were assassinat­ed and two others who were wounded during raids by armed bandits. Two other officers are missing.

The events were being closely monitored in Washington, D.C. Despite a request by Henry for a multinatio­nal force to help the struggling Haitian national police, he has had no takers. The recently confirmed U.S. ambassador to the Organizati­on of American

States, Frank Mora, told the Miami Herald that talks in the United Nations continue regarding a “police multinatio­nal force” that could help Haiti deal with the gang violence ravaging the country.

“We at the OAS are having another conversati­on as to how we can support the political process, the political agreement that was reached last month,” Mora said. “But right now I don’t have much more to say about those talks other than several countries are participat­ing in that conversati­on. But I hope that within a month we will have more details on that decision.”

A HUMAN-RIGHTS GROUP SAID AT LEAST 18 POLICE OFFICERS HAVE BEEN ‘VICTIMS OF ACTS DETRIMENTA­L TO THEIR LIVES’ THIS MONTH.

 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH AP ?? A woman and her daughter move past a barricade that was set up by supposed police officers who were protesting in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Thursday.
ODELYN JOSEPH AP A woman and her daughter move past a barricade that was set up by supposed police officers who were protesting in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Thursday.

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