UN says over 350 killed by Haiti vigilante groups as thousands flee gang war | Inquirer News

UN says over 350 killed by Haiti vigilante groups as thousands flee gang war

/ 09:39 AM August 19, 2023

UN says over 350 killed by Haiti vigilante groups

FILE PHOTO: A man carries an elderly man as they flee their neighborhood Carrefour Feuilles after gangs took over, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, August 15, 2023. REUTERS/Ralph Tedy Erol/File Photo

The United Nations on Friday estimated that more than 350 people have been killed in Haiti by civilian vigilante groups since April, amid escalating gang violence that has in recent days forced thousands to flee in parts of the capital.

Since April 24, when civilians lynched more than a dozen suspected criminals, birthing the “Bwa Kale” vigilante movement, some 310 alleged gang members, 46 civilians, and a police officer have been killed, spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Ravina Shamdasani said Friday.

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The report comes after fighting intensified late last week around the capital’s heavily populated Carrefour Feuilles neighborhood, where attacks from the Grand Ravine gang prompted around 5,000 people to flee their homes.

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Haiti’s under-gunned police have struggled to battle the gangs, which now control large parts of the capital.

“We used to see clashes between gangs, now it’s gangs against the population,” said Serge Dalexis, the head of the International Rescue Committee’s Haiti office.

Most of the IRC’s partners working around Port-au-Prince have had to suspend mobile operations amid the recent escalation, which Dalexis said had concentrated in five hotspots around the capital.

Under-funded response

“It’s very chaotic,” said Dalexis, saying many people fled their homes without key medication and only the clothes on their backs.

READ: UN chief says ‘robust use of force’ needed against Haiti’s gangs

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Late on Thursday around 600 people sought shelter at a partner group in the lower part of Carrefour Feuilles, he said, adding they were now helping distribute food rations and hygiene kits and moving people to displaced people camps.

At the camps, the IRC is working to provide healthcare and services to victims of gender violence which has become daily abuse in areas under gang control.

The UN estimates that since the start of 2023, at least 2,439 people have been killed and some 200,000 people internally displaced amid severe food shortages, kidnappings and widespread sexual violence.

Haiti’s unelected government requested security assistance last October, and countries are now discussing sending a UN-backed Kenya-led force to bolster police.

READ: Thousands in Haiti march to demand safety from violent gangs as killings, kidnappings soar

Shamdasani reiterated UN calls for urgent security action in strict compliance with human rights standards, while Dalexis called for guarantees of sufficient humanitarian funding.

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Chronically underfunded campaigns have forced agencies including the World Food Program to slash aid, and many NGOs have shuttered operations amid dwindling budgets and increasing risk to staff and residents attempting to reach their services.

TAGS: gang wars, Haiti, United Nations, Violence

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