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Haiti is as dangerous for children as Gaza, UN report shows
Haiti is as dangerous for children as Gaza, UN report shows

Miami Herald

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

Haiti is as dangerous for children as Gaza, UN report shows

Violence against children in Haiti increased by nearly 500% last year, according to a United Nations report, ranking the Caribbean nation as dangerous a place for children war-torn Gaza, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia and Nigeria. The U.N.'s Children in Armed Conflict report, which was released late Thursday, singled out the country's most powerful armed gang coalition for the increasing wave of children being maimed, killed and raped as armed gangs carry out coordinated attacks across the capital and beyond. The staggering 490% increase between 2023 and 2024 in 'grave violations' is cited in the report, which added Haiti last year for the first time to its blacklist of countries that violate children's rights. Haiti now ranks third among countries that have seen the sharpest percentage increase in verified grave violations against children. The country ranked higher than Ukraine, which is actively in a war with Russia. The U.N. was able to verify 2,269 grave violations against 1,373 children in both the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince and the rice-growing Artibonite region. The violations included sexual violence, killings and attacks on schools and hospitals. The leading culprits behind the violations were armed gangs, most notably the powerful Viv Ansanm gang coalition, which for the first time has been cited in the report. In May, the Trump administration designated Viv Ansanm and another gang operating in the country's Artibonite region, Gran Grif, as foreign and global terrorists. The U.N. official said should Gran Grif continue to survive, it could also soon find itself listed due to the atrocities it has been carrying out against poor rural farmers and their families. The violations against children in Haiti are 'horrific,' a senior U.N. official said, stressing that the number of verified incidents is but the bare minimum —and not the maximum —of the horrors children are being subjected to. For example, rapes and sexual violence against children, particularly gang rape, saw a 35% increase globally in 2024. The inclusion of Haiti in the U.N.'s report came after lobbying that what was occurring inside the country was more than just mere gang violence. Already this year, more than 2,600 people have been killed in gang-related violence as gangs not only threaten the collapse of the capital, but extend their control to other regions. Still, independently verifying gangs' atrocities or even police operations isn't easy. 'Little information is coming out,' said the U.N. official, who noted they started the verification exercise in earnest last August. 'The U.N. has very little presence in there. The harbor doesn't work. The [main international] airport doesn't work. The border is closed. 'We simply cannot get the full impact of what is happening in Haiti, but we know it's horrific enough that it is already providing horrendous figures with the little information that we're able to get now,' the official added. Alarming figures globally Globally, the U.N. verified 41,370 incidents affecting some 22,495 children. The bulk of the incidents were committed in 2024 while about 5,149 were committed earlier but verified last year. Non-State armed groups were responsible for almost half of the violations, while government forces were the main perpetrator of the killing and maiming of children, attacks on schools and hospitals, and the denial of humanitarian access, the report said. The report's findings are the highest number of 'grave violations' against children since the United Nations started tracking violence against children almost 30 years ago. 'The cries of 22,495 innocent children who should be learning to read or play ball — but instead have been forced to learn how to survive gunfire and bombings— should keep all of us awake at night,' said the Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, Virginia Gamba, in a statement. 'This must serve as a wake-up call,' she added. 'We are at the point of no return.' For the past year, U.N. officials have been sounding the alarm over Haiti's escalating armed gang violence, noting that children as young as 8 years old make up the ranks of criminal gangs and are being heavily recruited. Some are used as lookouts, while others are armed with matches and gasoline to set fire to homes and businesses during attacks. Others are armed with guns and told to fire shots. 'We ask that children may not be condemned to death' U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres in the report says he's deeply concerned by the grave violations. And while he welcomes the creation of a task force by Haiti's transitional authorities to implement a handover protocol on the transfer and reintegration of children allegedly associated with armed gangs, the report itself raises questions about how Haiti's transition government and police are addressing the crisis, especially as they turn to the use of mercenaries and weaponized drones to go after armed gangs and their leaders. The report notes that during the verification period, they were able to confirm the presence of only 26 boys who had been detained by the Haiti National Police for their alleged association with armed gangs, and they were being detained in a penitentiary where minors are held alongside adults under harsh conditions. Given the reporting on the scale of youth involved in gang activities, there are unanswered questions about how children, who are the heart of the conflict in Haiti, are being treated once found with weapons. 'All over the planet, we're seeing more and more, not just forced but also voluntary recruitment of under age boys and girls for lack of options, lack of possibilities, sometimes it's the only livelihood, joining an armed group. And so the chances are very high that any governmental or U.N. force engaged in some type of stability or peace action on the ground is going to be fighting children,' the senior U.N. official said. 'We ask that children may not be condemned to death,' the official added, saying children in Haiti are getting swept up in the violence as both victims and forced perpetrators. 'For us, everybody, zero to 18 is a victim.'

Haiti Is Using Drones to Fight Gangs. Here's Why That's Likely to Be Illegal.
Haiti Is Using Drones to Fight Gangs. Here's Why That's Likely to Be Illegal.

New York Times

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Haiti Is Using Drones to Fight Gangs. Here's Why That's Likely to Be Illegal.

A new video released by the Haitian police a few days ago suggests that a notorious gang leader, Vitel'homme Innocent, who has a $2 million bounty on his head, was under attack and running for cover. Other footage the authorities released last month showed explosions coming from the sky. The unspoken message was clear: The Haitian government, armed with drones, is committed to taking the streets back from violent criminals. Drones fitted with explosives are Haiti's latest desperate effort to curb rampant violence that has forced 1.3 million people from their homes. After more than three months of drone strikes in Haiti's capital, most of which is under gang control, attacks appear to have lessened. But no gang territory has been retaken, and though one top gang leader was reported to have been wounded recently, not a single high-value target has been killed or captured. Now, in a surprising rebuke, the Canadian police, which has provided drones to Haiti, are calling the government's strikes illegal. Drone strikes have reportedly killed more than 300 gang members in Port-au-Prince, the capital, according to a leading human rights group. Gangs have retaliated against the attacks by killing at least four civilians. Why are drones being used? The Haitian government has been fighting a losing battle against Viv Ansanm, a coalition of gangs that formed last year and attacked government institutions like police stations and jails. The gangs, which raise money through extortion, kidnappings and tolls at illegal roadblocks, now control more than 80 percent of Port-au-Prince. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Killer gangs are inches from ruling all of Haiti
Killer gangs are inches from ruling all of Haiti

Hindustan Times

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Hindustan Times

Killer gangs are inches from ruling all of Haiti

The collapse of Haiti's government in April last year was a challenge but also an opportunity. An interim government called the Transitional Presidential Council was installed. A UN-brokered, Kenyan-led security mission arrived soon after. But a year later things are worse than ever. 'We are approaching a point of no return,' María Isabel Salvador, the UN's top official in Haiti, told its Security Council at a meeting on April 21st. Tasked with preparing for elections that in theory will be held in November, the council is now mired in allegations of corruption. The security force of around 1,000 people (less than half the number originally planned) has not been able to stem the chaos. Its funding runs out in September. The council is a 'transitional authority that controls nothing', says Claude Joseph, a former prime minister. 'It's an unsustainable catastrophe. We could lose Port-au-Prince at any time.' Port-au-Prince, the capital, now sees daily gun battles in which police and civilian vigilantes face off against a gang coalition called Viv Ansanm ('Living Together'). It has seized control of much of the city. The international airport has been all but shut down; the only way in or out is by helicopter, or by a barge that skirts the coast to bypass gang territory to the south. On May 2nd the United States designated Viv Ansanm and a sister organisation as terrorist groups, opening the door to tougher criminal penalties for those who provide them with money and weapons. The collapse of public life is accelerating. Most schools are shut. Cholera is spreading. The Marriott, one of the last functioning hotels, has closed its doors. Gangs have surrounded the offices of Digicel, Haiti's main cellular network, through which most people connect to the internet. 'If Digicel goes down, the country goes dark,' warns a security expert. The gangs don't need it. Increasingly sophisticated, they use Elon Musk's Starlink satellite system to communicate, organising themselves to the extent that they have been able to keep control over access to Haiti's ports. They also extort lorry drivers and bus operators moving along many of the country's main roads. The UN reports that in February and March more than 1,000 people were killed and 60,000 displaced, adding to the 1m, nearly 10% of the population, who have fled their homes in the past two years. Circulating videos show gang members playing football with severed heads, bragging: 'We got the dogs.' Central Haiti, once relatively peaceful, is fragmenting into fiefs. Mirebalais, a city which lies between Port-au-Prince and the border with the Dominican Republic, is now controlled by gangs. 'The country has become a criminal enterprise. It's the wild, wild West,' says a foreign official. Patience is running thin at the UN Security Council. The United States has already committed $600m to the security mission, but is unlikely to offer more. 'America cannot continue shouldering such a significant financial burden,' said Dorothy Shea, the US ambassador to the UN. Few other countries want to donate. The Transitional Presidential Council is so desperate that it is exploring deals with private military contractors. It has been talking to Osprey Global Solutions, a firm based in North Carolina. The founder of Blackwater, Erik Prince, visited Haiti in April to negotiate contracts to provide attack drones and training for an anti-gang task force. The council declined to comment. The Haitian police are overwhelmed; an estimated 12,000 officers police a population that approaches 12m, barely half the UN-recommended ratio. Weak leadership, poor co-ordination with the Kenyan-led force, and calls for the ousting of the police chief point to deep institutional rot. In Canapé-Vert, one of Port-au-Prince's last gang-free pockets, a former policeman known as 'Commander Samuel' leads a vigilante group called Du Sang 9 ('New Blood' in Creole). Gangs have thinned its numbers. It is all that stands between them and the prime minister's office. Clarification (June 3rd 2025): Paragraph eight of this article has been amended to make clear that the council exploring deals is the Transitional Presidential Council. Sign up to El Boletín, our subscriber-only newsletter on Latin America, to understand the forces shaping a fascinating and complex region. Get 360° coverage—from daily headlines to 100 year archives.

Rubio: U.S. will not punish humanitarian-aid groups in Haiti forced to pay gang tolls
Rubio: U.S. will not punish humanitarian-aid groups in Haiti forced to pay gang tolls

Miami Herald

time21-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

Rubio: U.S. will not punish humanitarian-aid groups in Haiti forced to pay gang tolls

The Trump administration has no intention of punishing humanitarian-aid groups that are forced to pay gang-enforced tolls in order to provide aid to Haitians who have been victimized by the ongoing violence, Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Congress on Wednesday. Earlier this month, the Trump administration designated Haiti's major gangs as foreign and global terrorists, and warned that anyone providing 'material support' risks being penalized and criminally charged. The warning has created and fear in Haiti, where little gets through without going through armed gangs, now in control of up to 90% of metropolitan Port-au-Prince and parts of the Artibonite region and Central Plateau. 'We are concerned that humanitarian groups, in order to distribute humanitarian aid, are often charged, for lack of a better term, 'tolls.' You gotta pay the money to let them go,' Rubio said during his testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday in response to a question about Haiti. 'Will that make them subject to sanctions because they paid somebody money to let them go through? That is not the intent of these sanctions and we don't intend to punish them.' READ ME: Haiti gang leader 'Yonyon' found guilty of kidnapping 16 U.S. missionaries Rubio's first appearance before the committee came a day after he met with senators. In both hearings, he was lauded by Republicans but heavily criticized by Democrats over the administration's cuts to foreign aid and his revoking of student visas. Haiti came up only once on Wednesday, and the questions were posed by South Florida U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick. After the powerful Viv Ansanm gang coalition and the allied Gran Grif gang in the Artibonite region were designated as as Foreign Terrorist Organizations and Specially Designated Global Terrorists, Cherfilus-McCormick and New York U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks, the committee's ranking member, told Rubio they are worried the designation will worsen the humanitarian situation in Haiti, where reports of sexual violence against children are seeing a dramatic rise. In addition to displacing more than 1 million Haitians, more than half of whom are children, gang violence has resulted in half of the population, 5.7 million people, to go hungry. It has also left Haitians without access to healthcare and led to oil companies last week warning of a collapse of the economy after gangs doubled their extortion fees to use the roads they control. 'We think that designating them was important,' Rubio said, stressing that there are individuals, including those living in Florida, 'who are in cahoots with these gangs.' Rubio said he feels 'passionately about' the situation in Haiti, and used Cherfilus-McCormick's questions as an opportunity to offer the first public insight into his thinking on what the U.S. policy should be, including changing the international armed mission's current mandate, which requires them to be defensive in posture and limits the abilities of its 1,000 security personnel in taking on the armed gangs. The gang members 'have to be eliminated, put in jail... you've got to get rid of them. As long as they're around, you won't be able to have stability in the country,' he said. The Kenya force, he added, has 'complaints about some of the equipment they've been provided. So it's a combination of not having a force posture, not having the legal authority, and not having the appropriate equipment they claim to be able to conduct some of these missions.' Rubio also doubled down on the idea that the Organization of American States should take over leadership of effort against the gangs from Kenya's Multinational Security Support mission. 'We're going to challenge the OAS to build a mission with regional partners to confront this,' he said. 'We're grateful to the Kenyans, but this is a regional problem, and it should have a regional solution.' Rubio's proposition, which he first made public on Tuesday during his appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, comes with its own sets of challenges. They include whether the OAS charter would allow for such an involvement, whether its members would deploy forces and who would pay for the effort. The Trump administration has made it clear that it can't continue to carry the lion's share of the cost of Haiti's anti-gang efforts. Rubio's comments come amid ongoing cuts to foreign aid by the administration and a continued push by some Republican lawmakers for Kenya to focus on fighting terrorists in Africa, and not in Haiti. Rubio defended himself against accusations by Democrats that he has betrayed the positions on foreign aid that he once held as a senator who once spoke of the importance of U.S. soft power and humanitarian assistance. It remains unclear where any future funding for the Kenya mission will come from. After Republicans in Congress opposed paying for the Kenya force, the Biden administration used money from the Pentagon and re-directed other funding. Rubio did not provide any specifics on the mission, which is asking for more and better equipment and waiting to see if the U.S. will extend the contract of its base of operations in Port-au-Prince beyond September, when it expires. 'We're going to continue to be supportive of that mission for two reasons,' Rubio said. 'It's the only mission, and number two, because of the Kenyans; they've been very brave.... And number three, because who's going to join a future mission if the previous mission was abandoned? But we don't believe the [Kenya-led] mission is going to solve this problem. It could be part of the answer, but it won't alone be the answer.' Haiti poses a fundamental challenge in that 'none of our existing international mechanisms are built' to tackle the problem of a country controlled by organized crime and threatened by 'a coalition of criminal enterprises,' he said. 'It's basically a very different mission set,' he said. 'We're undertaking, right now, a substantial review... of what options exist to tackle a country that's being taken over by a mafia, for lack of a better term.' Haiti's gang members, whom he estimated to be as many as 45,000, 'don't care about governing the country. They just want to control territory. 'So if there's no government, it's like allowing the mafia to take over the five boroughs of New York,' Rubio said.

Haiti gang leader back on trial in US, this time for missionaries' 2021 kidnapping
Haiti gang leader back on trial in US, this time for missionaries' 2021 kidnapping

American Military News

time19-05-2025

  • American Military News

Haiti gang leader back on trial in US, this time for missionaries' 2021 kidnapping

The one-time 'king' of one of Haiti's most violent criminal gang, already looking at spending 35 years in a U.S. prison for his role in a gunrunning conspiracy that funneled high-powered weapons to gang members using kidnapping proceeds, will soon learn if he will face more prison time in the United States for his alleged role in the abduction of 17 Christian missionaries, including five children. Germine Joly, better known as 'Yonyon,' who served as leader of the 400 Mawozo gang in Port-au-Prince, was sentenced last year after pleading guilty to a 48-count indictment related to weapons smuggling and money laundering. For the last week, he's been back on trial in front of the same federal judge, John D. Bates, inside a Washington, D.C., courtroom, charged with 16 counts of hostage taking. On Wednesday, closing arguments are expected in the case where federal prosecutors accuse Joly of targeting the group in order to use them as a bargaining chip to win his release from a Haitian prison, from where he conducted arms purchases and ran kidnappings and extortion rackets. The incident involves the 2021 abduction of 16 U.S. citizens and a Canadian national with Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries. Missionaries working in Haiti, the group was taken at gunpoint after returning from visiting an orphanage on the outskirts of Haiti's capital. At the time, Joly was leader of 400 Mawozo, a post he held from August 2020 through May 2022. Unfolding three months after the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, the brazen abduction thrust 400 Mawozo into the global spotlight and showed how even foreigners, long isolated from Haiti's vexing crises, were no longer immune from the violence. The gang demanded $1 million per hostage before they were eventually let go after an undisclosed ransom amount was paid. Their release was made to look like an escape by 400 Mawozo co-leader Lanmò Sanjou, aka Joseph Wilson. The decision caused a rift between Lanmò Sanjou and Joly, and temporarily weakened the gang, which has since emerged as a powerful force inside the Viv Ansanm coalition that has been wreaking havoc across Port-au-Prince. In the run-up to the trial, Joly tried to get the kidnapping charges dismissed, arguing that he was illegally extradited to the U.S. by Haitian authorities and the kidnapping accusations were not part of the extradition request. He also tried to suppress information at his trial, including his previous role in the kidnapping of several U.S. citizens in the summer of 2021, his leadership role in 400 Mawozo's kidnapping-for-guns scheme and his imprisonment in Haiti. The kidnappings, prosecutors say, were part of a conspiracy by Joly and 400 Mawozo that 'provided the gang with proceeds that they transferred to the United States in order to purchase weapons,' which the gang then used to take more hostages. As part of the scheme, prosecutors say Joly instructed Lanmò Sanjou on the gangs' hostage-taking operations, and ransoms paid to Lanmò Sanjou were eventually sent to Joly. He then directed the gang's bookkeepers on how to disburse the proceeds. Bates, who presided over Joly's previous trial, agreed to keep the jury from hearing the exact count — 48 — of Joly's previous charges. However, he declined to dismiss the case and agreed to allow the government to admit evidence related to 400 Mawozo's structure, organization and 2021 hostage takings. Bates also allowed the government to present evidence showing how Joly was the 'primary facilitator' of the gang's kidnappings-for-guns scheme: Joly not only chose which weapons that associates in Florida bought, he oversaw the purchase of at least 24 semi-automatic firearms in Florida between March and November 2021 for shipment to 400 Mawozo In the case of the missionaries, federal prosecutors contend that during the two months most of them were being held hostage, 400 Mawozo members 'made ransom demands or negotiated ransom with representatives' of the 16 Americans on at least 18 occasions. 'The gang also made repeated threats about the necessity of the ransom payments, claiming they would kill or stop feeding the hostages absent payment,' the court document says. The idea that the hostages were a bargaining chip for Joly's release from prison was also repeated throughout the two-month ordeal, prosecutors say. For example, after Joly had authorized the release of two hostages for medical reasons, he instructed the gang that 'no additional hostages would be released unless (he) was released from prison.' Joly has argued that the U.S. tricked the Haitian government into extraditing him and that its 'outrageous conduct' violated his due process. He also argued that there is no evidence that the Haitian government held a hearing or other judicial inquiry to ensure his extradition was in line with any treaty with the U.S. U.S. authorities said Joly wasn't extradited under a treaty and instead was transferred by Haitian authorities through 'deportation, expulsion, or any other lawful means.' ___ © 2025 Miami Herald. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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