San Diego Union-Tribune

2 KIDNAPPED MISSIONARI­ES RELEASED

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Two people associated with an American missionary group seized in a mass kidnapping in Haiti more than a month ago have been released, the organizati­on said Sunday.

The hostages were among 17 people kidnapped by a notorious Haitian gang Oct. 16 as they paid a visit to an orphanage outside the capital, Portau-Prince.

In announcing that two of them had been released, the Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries urged discretion to protect those still in the hands of the gang members.

“We cannot provide or confirm the names of those released, the reasons for their release, where they are from or their current location,” the group said. “We ask that those who have more specific informatio­n about the release and the individual­s involved would safeguard that informatio­n.”

The group, which included 16 Americans and one Canadian, had been working with Christian Aid Ministries before being abducted by one of Haiti’s most fearsome gangs, 400 Mawozo, which is infamous for orchestrat­ing mass kidnapping.

The gang initially demanded a ransom of $1 million per person, but that was widely viewed as a start to the negotiatio­ns that are common in kidnapping­s in Haiti. It was not immediatel­y clear how much money, if any, was paid.

The mass kidnapping of more than a dozen American citizens, five children among them, set off an internatio­nal furor, with American lawmakers condemning the violence in Haiti, and the FBI and the State Department working with local authoritie­s to win the missionari­es’ freedom.

Mass abductions have become commonplac­e in Haiti, but the brazen kidnapping in broad daylight shocked even local officials and residents accustomed to gang-fueled violence, a further sign of the country’s growing lawlessnes­s.

Security in the country has broken down in the wake of numerous natural disasters and political crises, including the assassinat­ion in July of President Jovenel Moïse. Violence has overwhelme­d much of the capital, and by some estimates, powerful gangs now control about half the city.

The gangs, armed and often with political backing, have long been part of the country’s social fabric, but after Moïse’s killing, they have turned more assertive, taking control of vast swaths of territory.

The surging gang violence has prompted peaceful protests of late, with groups in towns and cities demanding a government response.

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