Gang violence in Haiti – Media reports: Gangs attack government buildings in Haiti – News

  • After days of violent gang violence in Haiti’s capital Port-au-Prince, several buildings in the government district were attacked, according to media reports.
  • The alleged bandits’ targets on Friday evening (local time) included the National Palace, the Interior Ministry and a regional police headquarters, Haitian and US media reported.
  • Social media users reported shots fired.

Violence has paralyzed Port-au-Prince for over a week. Police stations were attacked and shots were fired at the airport – all flights were canceled.

The health system was on the verge of collapse, according to information released on Wednesday by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk. According to him, more than 4,500 prisoners escaped in attacks on two prisons last Saturday. According to a report by the “AyiboPost” portal, the notoriously understaffed police hardly had any presence on the streets of the capital.

Legend:

Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier is the leader of the main armed groups. He threatens civil war (picture from March 5th).

Archive/Keystone/AP Photo/Odelyn Joseph

The humanitarian situation in Haiti was already very tense. According to the UN, almost half of the Caribbean country’s eleven million residents suffered from acute hunger, and various brutal gangs controlled a total of around 80 percent of Port-au-Prince.

Leader threatens civil war

Now the two main armed groups joined forces. Its leader, Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, threatened civil war if interim Prime Minister Ariel Henry did not resign. He had agreed to hold elections by the end of August 2025. They would be the first in Haiti since Henry took over government shortly after the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in July 2021.

Henry has apparently not returned from a trip abroad because of the security situation. The US government called on him to speed up the process towards elections. UN Secretary-General António Guterres called for financing a multinational security mission in Haiti that had already been approved by the UN Security Council.

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