UN expert: Haiti has a chance now to tackle gang violence as new international force deploys

Date:

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Haiti has a chance now to tackle pervasive gang violence with a U.S.-initiated international force starting to deploy and a prime minister committed to providing alternatives for young gang members, the United Nations’ expert on human rights in Haiti said Monday.

“We’re in a place now where the next few months are going to be crucial,” said William O’Neill, who visited Haiti this month. “And I think it can turn around, because the gangs, at the end of the day, are not that powerful.”

The U.N. Security Council on Sept. 30 approved a plan co-sponsored by the U.S. and Panama to authorize a much larger, 5,550-member force with expanded powers to help stop the escalating gang violence in Haiti. It is aimed at transforming a Kenya-led multinational force, which arrived in Haiti in June 2024 and grew to about 1,100 troops, into a “gang suppression force” with the power to arrest suspected gang members, which the current force does not have.

O’Neill told U.N. reporters that the support office and other elements of the gang suppressing force are already in Haiti setting up and the first troop arrivals are slated for early April, with more contingents arriving in the following months and the entire force on the ground by September. Some contingents in the Kenya-led forces are expected to stay, including from El Salvador, Guatemala and Jamaica, he said.

Gangs have grown in power since the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in 2021. They now control 90% of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and have expanded their activities into the countryside, including looting, kidnapping, sexual assaults and rape. Haiti has not had a president since the assassination. Haitian police and the U.N.-backed multinational force have struggled to quell the violence.

O’Neill urged the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions on more gang leaders and corrupt politicians and oligarchs tied to the gangs. And he said the flow of guns and other weapons primarily from the United States must be stopped because then “the gangs literally run out of bullets, and they lose their strength.”

The Haiti expert, designated by the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, said he was frustrated that nearly five years after Moise’s assassination the gangs have become more and more powerful. But he said he now has “more than hope” with the arrival of the gang suppression force, and a prime minister with a Cabinet committed to delivering results for the people and especially opportunities for young people and gang members.

Right now, he said, gang leaders are on social media all the time showing off their jewelry and fancy athletic wear and bragging about what they do. “Kids see this and they say, ‘That’s how I become rich, that’s how I become a big shot.’”

But O’Neill said there’s a terrible video that came out a few weeks ago showing a gang leader with a baseball bat beating 10 or 15 young boys lying on the floor because they were suspected of trying to get out of the gang area.

He said getting rid of several gang leaders could have a major impact on tackling the violence, because others who seek money and power would get the message.

“Haiti is facing a difficult yet promising moment. If we can help Haiti address insecurity, fight corruption and impunity and protect human rights, then everyone will prosper,” O’Neill said. “We just can’t let them down.”

Share post:

Les + Populaires

Plus d'Articles
Similaires

FBI’s search of slain Haiti president’s crime scene draws scrutiny in Miami trial

The FBI case agent assigned to the assassination of Haiti’s president, Jovenel Moïse, testified Monday in Miami federal court that he never dusted for fingerprints or swabbed for DNA at the crime scene more than four years ago. “We did the best we could while we were at the residence, but timing was a factor,” FBI special agent Martin Suarez said.

Haïti : RSF alerte sur le sort des journalistes Osnel Espérance et Junior Célestin enlevés à Port-au-Prince

Le travail journalistique en Haïti s’effectue aujourd’hui dans un climat de menace extrême. Dans un pays où des gangs armés contrôlent une grande partie de la capitale, l’enlèvement de journalistes en pleine mission et les attaques contre des figures emblématiques de la presse aggravent le silence médiatique et la peur. Il incombe également à la communauté internationale de se mobiliser pour la protection des journalistes et des médias.

Chad to gradually replace Kenyan force in Haiti through October, Dominican Republic says

The UN-backed Gang Suppression Force - an international mobilisation intended to help Haiti's police fight powerful armed gangs in the Caribbean country - should fully deploy by October this year, Roberto Alvarez, foreign minister of the neighbouring Dominican Republic, said on Tuesday. Alvarez, who spoke after a meeting with US embassy officials, said new troops from Chad are now being trained in the United States, and the Kenyan police who deployed to Haiti under an earlier model of the force should withdraw gradually.

La Cour suprême examinera les protections juridiques des migrants d’Haïti et de Syrie

La Cour suprême examinera les arguments relatifs à la volonté de l'administration Trump de mettre fin aux protections juridiques accordées aux personnes fuyant la guerre et les catastrophes naturelles dans divers pays du monde, notamment Haïti et la Syrie. Les juges ont refusé lundi de lever immédiatement ces protections pour des centaines de milliers de personnes, leur permettant ainsi de vivre et de travailler légalement aux États-Unis pour l'instant. La Cour devrait examiner l'affaire le mois prochain.