Yuma Sun

Haiti’s surge in gang violence led more than 53,000 to flee capital in less than 3 weeks

- BY EVENS SANON

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – More than 53,000 people have fled Haiti’s capital in less than three weeks, the vast majority to escape unrelentin­g gang violence, according to a United Nations report released Tuesday.

More than 60% are headed to Haiti’s rural southern region, which worries U.N. officials.

“Our humanitari­an colleagues emphasized that these department­s do not have sufficient infrastruc­ture, and host communitie­s do not have sufficient resources, to cope with the large number of people fleeing Port-au-prince,” said U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

The southern region already hosts more than 116,000 Haitians who previously left Port-au-prince, according to the report by the U.N.’S Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

The exodus from the capital of some 3 million people began shortly after powerful gangs launched a series of attacks on government institutio­ns at the end of February. Gunmen have burned police stations, opened fire on the main internatio­nal airport that remains closed and stormed Haiti’s two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates.

More than 1,500 people have been reported killed up to March 22, and another 17,000 have been left homeless, according to the U.N.

Among the rare travelers trying to head north instead of south from the capital were Marjorie Michelle-jean, a 42-year-old street vendor, and her two children, ages 4 and 7.

“I want to see them alive,” she said, explaining that stray bullets keep hitting the tin roof of their home. Last week, they tried twice to travel to her hometown of Mirebalais in central Haiti but were forced to turn back because of roadblocks.

“I will definitely try again,” she said. “It’s absolutely not safe in Port-auprince.”

Of the 53,125 people who fled Port-au-prince from March 8-27, nearly 70% already had been forced to abandon their homes and were living with relatives or in crowded and unsanitary makeshift shelters across the capital, the U.N. found.

More than 90% of Haitians leaving the capital have been crowding into buses, risking travel through gang-controlled territory where gang rapes have been reported and gunmen have been known to open fire on public transport.

The violence forced Prime Minister Ariel Henry to announce last month that he would resign once a transition­al presidenti­al council is created. Henry was in Kenya to push for the U.n.-backed deployment of a police force from the East African country when the attacks began, and he remains locked out of Haiti.

 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH/AP ?? YOUTH TAKE COVER after hearing gunshots at a public school that serves as a shelter for people displaced by gang violence, in Port-au-prince, Haiti, on March 22.
ODELYN JOSEPH/AP YOUTH TAKE COVER after hearing gunshots at a public school that serves as a shelter for people displaced by gang violence, in Port-au-prince, Haiti, on March 22.

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