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Friday, April 25, 2025

UN: Fresh gang violence in Haiti leaves 187 dead in 11 days

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765 days ago
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FILE - A parent, carrying his child after picking him up from school, runs past police carrying out an operation against gangs in the Bel-Air area of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, March 3, 2023. Prime Minister Ariel Henry signaled Friday, March 17, 2023 that he wants to mobilize Haiti’s military to help the National Police fight the country’s increasingly powerful criminal gangs. (AP Photo/Odelyn Joseph, File)

FILE - A parent, carrying his child after picking him up from school, runs past police carrying out an operation against gangs in the Bel-Air area of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, March 3, 2023. Prime Minister Ariel Henry signaled Friday, March 17, 2023 that he wants to mobilize Haiti’s military to help the National Police fight the country’s increasingly powerful criminal gangs. (AP Photo/Odelyn Joseph, File)

New clash­es be­tween gangs in Haiti’s cap­i­tal and be­yond have killed at least 187 peo­ple in less than two weeks and in­jured more than 150 oth­ers, the U.N. said Tues­day.

The fresh wave of vi­o­lence record­ed from Feb. 27 to March 9 in the cap­i­tal, Port-au-Prince, and in the cen­tral re­gion of Art­i­bonite al­so has dis­placed hun­dreds of peo­ple and forced farm­ers to aban­don fields as star­va­tion wors­ens, of­fi­cials said.

“The sit­u­a­tion is all the more alarm­ing for chil­dren, who are of­ten sub­ject­ed to all forms of armed vi­o­lence, in­clud­ing forced re­cruit­ment and sex­u­al vi­o­lence,” the U.N. in Haiti said.

The surge of vi­o­lence in cen­tral Haiti has been large­ly blamed on a gang called “Baz Gran Grif,” which rough­ly trans­lates to “Big Claw Crew.”

In ad­di­tion, near­ly 260 kid­nap­pings have been re­port­ed since the start of the year, with peo­ple ab­duct­ed from their homes or pub­lic places, of­fi­cials said.

Gangs have grown more pow­er­ful since the Ju­ly 2021 as­sas­si­na­tion of Pres­i­dent Jovenel Moïse, and al­ready con­trol an es­ti­mat­ed 60% of Port-au-Prince. They al­so have been clash­ing in the cen­tral towns of Pe­tite Riv­iere de l’Art­i­bonite, Ver­rettes, Es­tere and Lian­court.

Prime Min­is­ter Ariel Hen­ry sig­naled last week that he is seek­ing to mo­bi­lize Haiti’s mil­i­tary to help an un­der-re­sourced and un­der­staffed po­lice de­part­ment fight the un­re­lent­ing gang vi­o­lence, which has forced an in­creas­ing num­ber of schools and busi­ness­es to shut­ter.

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