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Haiti: Hundreds of inmates escape after armed gangs storm prison
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The US State Department is warning Americans not to travel to Haiti as the Caribbean nation continues to grapple with spiralling gang violence.
Haiti is listed as a Level 4: Do Not Travel destination – an advisory level that was in place even before the assassination of President Jovenel Moi?se in 2021.
A state of emergency was declared in the nation last week, while the US Embassy in Haiti issued a security alert saying that the “current security situation in Haiti is unpredictable and dangerous”.
On Monday, Caribbean leaders and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met in Jamaica to urgently discuss the crisis.
On Monday, Haiti’s prime minister Ariel Henry agreed to resign once a transitional presidential council is created. Kenya announced on Tuesday it would not deploy a previously organised security mission to Haiti as there is no “sitting government” to coordinate with on the ground.
The latest violence, which began on 29 February, has seen gang members burn down police stations and raid the country’s two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates.
Heavily armed criminal gangs also attacked major government assets across the capital Port-au-Prince and took control of the country’s main international airports.
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Key points US forces deployed to protect US embassy in Haiti US and EU embassies begin evacuating staff Haiti prime minister resigns as criminal gangs plunge country into crisis
Show latest update 7 hours ago Haiti crisis: What we know about the gang takeover that has killed dozens and displaced 15,000
Haiti is spiralling further into chaos after armed gang members freed thousands of prisoners, burned government buildings, and forced the prime minister to resign after he fled the country to seek help.
Dozens of people are dead and roughly 15,000 have been forced to flee their homes due to gang raids, according to The Associated Press, with many now facing dwindling supplies of food and water.
The violence escalated on 29 February when Haiti’s powerful criminal gangs, which already controlled large parts of the economy and most of the capital city, Port-au-Prince, launched a series of attacks on police stations, prisons, and other government buildings.
After all the capital’s international airports were seized by gangs, prime minister Ariel Henry was trapped outside the country and faced both domestic and international pressure to resign.
On 5 March, the leader of the unified gangs Jimmy Chérizier — known by his childhood nickname, “Barbecue” — threatened continued violence if Mr Henry did not step down.
He said “if the international community continues to support [Mr Henry], we’ll be heading straight for a civil war that will lead to genocide.”
READ MORE:
Haiti crisis: What we know about the gang takeover that has paralysed the country Haiti’s government has been paralysed by all-powerful street gangs that now control the capital city. But experts say it is Haitian politicians who created the monster, report Julia Reinstein and Io Dodds
Graig Graziosi 14 March 2024 03:59
8 hours ago Kenya security mission on hold until a ‘sitting government’ is established in Haiti
The US pledged to spend $300m to help fund a Kenyan-led security mission to Haiti following increases in gang violence across the nation.
Prior to his resignation, Prime Minister Ariel Henry visited Kenya to ask for security assistance. That prompted a gang-led effort to remove him from office.
Hours after Mr Henry announced he was stepping down, Kenya announced it would not send a security team unless a “sitting government” was in place in Haiti.
“The deal they signed with the president [William Ruto] still stands although the deployment will not happen now because definitely we will require a sitting government to also collaborate with,” Salim Swaleh, Kenya’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, told The New York Times.
Graig Graziosi 14 March 2024 03:00
9 hours ago Jimmy ‘Barbecue’ Cherizier: The former cop-turned-gang leader bringing Haiti to its knees
Haiti’s prime minister Ariel Henry said he was resigning amid mounting international pressure following gang violence that has pushed the capital to the brink of civil war.
Mr Henry faced calls to resign from Haitian gang leaders who have taken control of capital Port-au-Prince, keeping the prime minister stranded outside the country.
Heavily armed gangs have tried to seize control of Haiti’s main international airport, exchanging gunfire with police and soldiers in the latest attack on key government sites.
READ MORE:
Jimmy ‘Barbecue’ Cherizier: Gang leader bringing Haiti to its knees US embassy says it is halting all official travel to the country and urges American citizens to leave
Graig Graziosi 14 March 2024 02:00
10 hours ago Ariel Henry was not allowed to return to Haiti after asking for Kenyan aid
Now-former Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry was not allowed to return to the nation after he left to ask for Kenya for help in the form of a security force to help stop gang uprisings.
Mr Henry took power in 2021 after the assassination of former President Jovenel Mo?se, ostensibly as an interim until a new election could be called. However, he continually delayed elections, citing security issues in the country.
One of the demands of the gangs that organised and attacked government facilities and ransacked neighborhoods in recent days was that Mr Henry step down.
After his resignation, Kenya said it would not send its security force to Haiti until a sitting government is in place to coordinate their efforts.
Graig Graziosi 14 March 2024 01:00
11 hours ago Is it safe to travel to Haiti now amid gang takeover?
Several countries are advising their citizens against travelling to Haiti, including the US, UK, Ireland and Canada as gangs continue to take hold of the country.
Earlier this month, gangs attempted to take Haiti’s Toussaint Louverture International Airport, located in Port-Au-Prince, the country’s capital and broke into a nearby port services terminal. Armed men have also stormed police stations in the country and let thousands of prisoners loose from Haiti’s National Penitentiary.
Ariel Henry, who had been running the country as prime minister and acting president until he resigned on Tuesday amid international pressure, fled the country to Puerto Rico last week after he was refused entry into the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti. Dominican air, land and sea borders are closed to travellers.
READ MORE:
Is it safe to travel to Haiti now amid gang takeover? The US, UK, Ireland and Canada are advising their citizens against going to Haiti
Graig Graziosi 14 March 2024 00:00
12 hours ago WATCH: US deploys Marines to embassy in Haiti amid rising unrest
US deploys Marines to embassy in Haiti amid rising unrest
Graig Graziosi 13 March 2024 23:00
13 hours ago US officials called emergency talks on Haiti ‘critical moment’
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters a meeting in Kingston, Jamaica was a “critical moment for Haiti and also all of us”. Meanwhile, he praised Jamaica for its “leadership in the hemisphere that we share.”
Guyanese President Mohamed Irfaan Ali, who chairs CARICOM, the trade bloc holding the talks, said the aim of the meeting was to bring “stability and normalcy” to Haiti, but that Haitian stakeholders “are not where they need to be,” according to AFP.
“Time is not on their side,” Ali warned in a video posted to social media, while describing reports out of Haiti as “dire.”
Graig Graziosi 13 March 2024 22:00
14 hours ago WATCH: Aid channels at risk as security risk heightens in Haiti
Aid channels at risk as security risk heightens in Haiti
Graig Graziosi 13 March 2024 21:00
15 hours ago Haitian political alliance refuses Caricom plan to install a ruling council after Henry’s resignation
A pair of influential Haitain political figures have allied and have rejected a proposed ruling council developed by Caricom, a group representing 15 Caribbean nations.
Caricom planned to develop a council to step in and rule the island nation after the resignation of Prime Minister Ariel Henry.
However, Jean Charles Mo?se, an ex-senator and presidential candidate and former rebel leader Guy Philippe, announced on Wednesday that they will not agree to that plan.
Mr Mo?se instead wants a three-person presidential council — which he created with Philippe and a Haitian judge — to rule instead.
“We are not going to negotiate it,” he said during the conference. “We have to make them understand.”
Haiti US Deported Senator
(Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Graig Graziosi 13 March 2024 20:26
15 hours ago Why is Haiti so chaotic? Leaders used street gangs to gain power. Then the gangs got stronger
Haiti’s prime minister was last seen in Puerto Rico, negotiating his return to a homeland gripped by violence and controlled by heavily armed gangsters. With his fate in the air and the situation in Haiti deteriorating by the day, the world has been left to wonder whether the country will fully descend into anarchy or whether some semblance of order will be restored.
What is going on in Haiti?
It’s easy to blame this latest spasm of violence in the West’s first free Black republic on longstanding poverty, the legacy of colonialism, widespread deforestation, and European and U.S. interference.
However, a series of experts told The Associated Press that the most important immediate cause is more recent: Haitian rulers’ increasing dependence on street gangs.
READ MORE:
Why is Haiti so chaotic? Leaders used street gangs to gain power. Then the gangs got stronger It’s easy to blame the latest spasm of violence in Haiti on longstanding poverty, the legacy of colonialism, and European and U.S. interference with the West’s first free Black republic
Graig Graziosi 13 March 2024 20:16
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1/ 1US warns Americans not to travel to Haiti amid gang takeover
US warns Americans not to travel to Haiti amid gang takeover
The violence, which began on 29 February, has seen gang members burn down police stations and raid the country’s two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates
Anadolu via Getty Images
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