Miami Herald

Haiti’s National Penitentia­ry, already site of mass prison break by gangs, catches fire

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

First, armed groups attacked Haiti’s largest prison and orchestrat­ed a jailbreak of nearly 4,000 inmates, many of them murderers, kidnappers and gang leaders.

The the country’s National Penitentia­ry caught fire on Thursday.

The flames from inside the mammoth structure sent up billows of black smoke across Port-auPrince’s skies as bursts of automatic gunfire could be heard in the capital again after a few days of relative calm. The prison was empty after the few prisoners who did not escape on March 2 and 3 were relocated. The fire appeared to be accidental, several sources told the Miami Herald. A spokespers­on for the Haiti Nationif al Police was not immediatel­y available.

As a fire brigade made its way to the structure, Haitian police across town were once more fighting off gang attacks. Armed groups, which have been attempting to take control of the internatio­nal and domestic airports, made their way to the perimeter and opened fire across a runway. On the other side: the headquarte­rs of the Haiti National Police. A Haitian police official inside the headquarte­rs confirmed the incident and said police repelled the gangs.

Later in the afternoon, the home of Haiti National Police Director Frantz Elbé went up in flames in the Santo neighborho­od of Croix-des-Bouquets. Elbe didn’t respond to a request for comments, but the fire was confirmed by several sources who did not know

he had been targeted. The streets of the capital, normally teeming with foot traffic and cars, were quiet as people remained at home. Banks shut their doors at noon.

Marie Yolene Gilles, who is a human-rights activist with Eyes Wide Open/La Fondasyon Je Klere and monitors Haiti’s prison system, said the fire at the prison appears to have started in the highsecuri­ty section that inmates call “the Titanic.” The top level is where kidnappers and other major criminals are housed, while at the bottom is an isolation area that was temporaril­y used to hold 17 Colombians recently indicted in the July 2021 assassinat­ion of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.

The Colombians were quietly moved out the day after armed groups, with the aide of a drone, attacked the prison and freed more close to 4,000 prisoners. Among those who were freed were several high-profile gang leaders and two former top police officials who were in charge of Moïse’s presidenti­al detail, Dimitri Hérard and Jean Laguel Civil. They were also charged in the murder along with dozens of others by an investigat­ive judge in Haiti.

Prior to the recent coordinate­d attacks threatenin­g to topple what’s left of the Haitian state, the United Nations office in Port-au-Prince was reviewing Haiti’s prisons to determine where detained gang members may be held after the arrival of a Multinatio­nal Security Support mission led by Kenya. There were few options, given that most of the prisons are overcrowde­d with inmates who have been detained for years without ever being seen by a judge or formally charged.

One facility — a new, U.S.-built women’s prison on the outskirts of Port-auPrince in the town of Cabaret — was already overtaken by gangs in late January after authoritie­s were forced to move out inmates when repeated gang attacks led to a mass prison break. A second, in the suburbs of Croix-desBouquet­s, was also attacked by gangs the same day they breached the National Penitentia­ry.

In its latest report, the Eyes Wide Open Foundation said there were 1,030 prisoners at the Croix-desBouquet­s prison when it came under attack and 3,696 inside the National Penitentia­ry. The Titanic area had the padlocks of the cells broken by gang members, who then went one-by-one to free their leaders.

Of those the detainees at the National Penitentia­ry, only 87 responded to prison officials’ call to return the next day around noon. Some 3,609 remain free, among them kidnappers, rapists and terrorists, the report said.

The report notes that the mass prison break was premeditat­ed and was announced ahead of time on Feb. 29, when gang leaders published excerpts from a meeting where they decided to do everything in their power to free the inmates at the prison in Port-au-Prince before attacking other targets, such as the National Palace.

“They announced their strategy: attack at several points at the same time to keep the police busy and make it impossible for the [Haiti National Police] to respond to all these fronts at the same time,” the report said. “The same day, they went from speaking to actions: bursts of automatic weapons are heard a little everywhere, public offices, churches, police stations and even hospitals are attacked.”

Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

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