UN report details sexual abuse investigations involving foreign forces in Haiti

Date:

A United Nations report from February details four sexual abuse investigations, one involving a 12-year-old child, that implicate members of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) forces, a Kenyan-led and US-backed military mission to combat gang violence in Haiti.

“In 2025, the United Nations received four allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse involving personnel from the Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti,” the report says.

“All the allegations were found to be substantiated by investigations conducted by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.”

Three of the victims were children who were allegedly raped. A fourth victim, who allegedly suffered sexual violence, was 18-years-old.

The UN report states that the cases were referred to the MSS and its successor organization, the Gang Suppression Force (GSF), for “appropriate investigation and remedial measures.” CNN has reached out to the spokesperson for the MSS for comment.

The MSS was transitioned last year into the GSF, with a broader mandate to combat armed groups in the country. The news comes days after Chadian soldiers with the GSF arrived in the country on Wednesday.

The allegations were first reported by the Haitian newspaper Ayibo Post.

Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, told CNN that the report “has been shared with the Gang Suppression Force,” emphasizing that the mission is not under UN supervision.

“Four cases is four too many,” William O’Neill, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights’ Designated Expert on Haiti, told CNN.

“There must be independent investigations followed by prosecutions if the evidence is there. Maximum transparency and no impunity. And justice for the victims,” he said.

The document indicates that all four cases were investigated by the office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), with the case involving the 12-year-old investigated internally by the MSS.

The report adds another bitter note to the MSS mission, which struggled for a year to support local police’s response to an epidemic of gang violence before ending in October 2025.

Haiti was plunged into crisis in 2021, when mercenaries assassinated President Jovenel Moise. Gangs have since seized control of much of the capital, Port-au-Prince, leading then-Prime Minister Ariel Henry to request international military support in 2022.

The MSS mission was widely perceived as a failure, with funding shortfalls and a lack of personnel. Gangs have continued to kidnap, kill and displace Haitian civilians. In the first five months of 2024, 2,680 people were killed and more than 1.3 million forced from their homes, according to UN Human Rights chief Volker Turk.

“Nothing has changed,” said Réginald Fils-Aimé, a Haitian doctor with Zanmi Lasante, Haiti’s largest non-governmental healthcare provider. The group was forced to shutter several hospitals due to violence. Gangs control significant supply routes, disrupting access to medicine and equipment.

The report is not the first instance of misconduct lodged against international peacekeeping personnel in Haiti. CNN previously reported that UN peacekeepers sent to Haiti in the aftermath of the devastating 2010 earthquake fathered and abandoned dozens of children with Haitian women.

Share post:

Les + Populaires

Plus d'Articles
Similaires

Le secrétaire d’État adjoint des États-Unis, Christopher Landau, reçu au Palais national

le secrétaire d’Etat américain a fait un compte rendu de sa visite en Haïti, en notant un changement notable de la situation sécuritaire. “Lorsque notre administration a pris ses fonctions il y a seize mois, Haïti était au bord du gouffre, menacée par de violents gangs criminels qui risquaient de prendre le contrôle du pays et de provoquer un effondrement social total ainsi qu'un nouvel afflux de migrants (qui s'ajouteraient à ceux que l'administration Biden avait activement encouragés à venir). La situation est aujourd'hui radicalement différente”, a-t-il fait remarquer.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Landau visits Haiti amid deadly surge in violence

Deputy U.S. Secretary of State Christopher Landau visited Port-au-Prince on Friday on a last-minute trip during which he observed a shooting exercise involving members of the newly created Gang Suppression Force, which has yet to be fully deployed, and met with Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé. Landau’s visit comes at a particularly difficult moment for Fils-Aimé and residents of the capital and surrounding regions, where armed gangs have been tightening their grip and expanding their control; the country’s long-overdue elections increasingly look unlikely to take place this year.

Haïti et ses crises électorales

Depuis 1987, date de la tentative d’organiser les premières élections démocratiques en Haïti, les crises électorales avant, pendant ou après les scrutins, se sont succédé. Rares sont les élections sans crises et les crises sans une élection au bout des aventures. L’une nourrissant l’autre pour donner naissance à nos insatiables transitions.  Il est encore temps d’éviter la prochaine catastrophe électorale. Pour cela, il faudra de la pédagogie, de la simplification et des institutions au-dessus de tout soupçon. Pas d'approximation, pas d'omission, pas d’arrière-pensée.

La FRG annonce des opérations imminentes contre les gangs

La Force de répression des gangs (FRG) a annoncé qu’elle se trouve dans la phase finale de ses préparatifs avant le lancement de ses opérations en Haïti. Cette annonce intervient dans un contexte de détérioration continue de la situation sécuritaire, notamment à Port-au-Prince ainsi que dans plusieurs autres régions du pays, où les violences armées continuent de provoquer peur, déplacements de population et instabilité.