Gang violence in Haiti has hindered aid for earthquake victims. So a truce has been called — for now
LES CAYES, Haiti — The notorious leader of an armed
gang federation confirmed Sunday that a truce has been negotiated between
warring gangs to allow humanitarian aid to come from Haiti’s capital to quake-ravaged
regions in the country’s Southwest.
In a video, Jimmy Cherizier, a former Haiti National
police officer who is wanted in several massacres and goes by the name
“Barbecue,” also invited fellow “compatriots to show solidarity” with the
victims of the 7.2 magnitude earthquake that struck Southwest Haiti on Aug. 14
by sharing what little they have with them.
“Everyone knows that the victims will need water,
food, tents, tarpaulins,” Cherizier said in Creole. “We invite all those who
can to help us strengthen this momentum of solidarity by providing all they
can.”
He said fellow gang leaders from the 3rd District,
which is the gang-controlled area of Martissant and neighboring communities in
Port-au-Prince, “have temporarily made peace to allow the passage of helpers.”
Gang violence in Martissant, which is southwest of the
capitol, has presented a major logistical challenge for those wanting to come
provide assistance, and has helped delay the delivery of aid to the three
regions — the Nippes, Southwest and Grand’Anse — that have been devastated by
the deadly tremor.
In updated figures released Sunday, Haitian authorities
said they have now registered 2,207 deaths and 344 missing, a week after the
natural disaster. The quake also injured at least 12,268, and destroyed or
damage over 129,900 houses. Authorities have also said that at least 40% of the
population in all three regions — more than 684,000 people — are in need of
urgent humanitarian assistance.
The subject of a police warrant and U.S. sanctions for
his alleged role in a deadly 2018 massacre that occurred in the poor
neighborhood of La Saline in Haiti’s capital, Cherizier tries to present
himself as the people’s savior. But his words and actions have also come to
denote the armed violence increasingly plaguing Haiti.
Last week, Haiti National Police said they had beefed
up security along Martissant to provide access to the Southwest, but conceded
that traveling through the area, especially without police escort, remained
risky for aid convoys or anyone seeking to come provide aid.
For months prior to the disaster, the Great South, as
the region is referred to here, has been practically cut off from
Port-au-Prince and violent gangs until now had ignored calls to cease the
violence or to allow for a humanitarian corridor so that ambulances responding
to COVID-19 cases and other health emergencies can respond.
The new surge in violence, which erupted in early
June, has forced the displacement of more than 16,000 Haitians, the United
Nations has said, adding to Haiti’s humanitarian challenges.
In late June, the French medical charity Doctors
Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontière announced it was temporarily closing a
health facility in the area after doctors and patients were the target of an
armed gang attack. Weeks later, it announced the permanent closure, saying
conditions had not improved.
Dr. Ronald Laroche, the founder of DASH, which runs a
network of eight private hospitals and clinics, said that gangs had also forced
the closure of one of his facilities in Martissant after they took over and
then started shooting “at each other” from both his DASH medical center and the
MSF emergency clinic.
After two months, DASH’s 18-bed facility was “still in
the hands of gangsters,” Laroche added.
Haiti’s criminal violence came into full view last
week after Laroche and an official at another hospital in the capital, Bernard
Mevs, confirmed that surgeons working at their respective facilities had been
kidnapped while en route to work. Both doctors were released as of Saturday but
not before a pregnant woman and her unborn child died because the DASH doctor
was abducted while en route to do an emergency Cesarean section.
It’s unclear if gangs were behind the kidnappings, but
the abductions highlighted the ongoing insecurity and erosion of rule of law in
Haiti, even before the latest calamity.
In the video, Cherizer sent greetings to the citizens
of the Departments of the South, Nippes and Grand’Anse.
“We want to tell them that the G9 Revolutionary Forces
and Allies, all for one and one for all, sympathize with their pain and
sorrow,” he said. “We express our sympathies to all those who, husband or
wives, moms and dad, children and parents, who have lost a loved one. We salute
every victim. We also greet each fellow, injured crippled or disabled ...
citizen found in the hospital because of the earthquake.”
He later added that the G9 plans to participate in the
relief in the coming days, “by bringing them help.”
Source: https://nordot.app/802268383254872064?c=592622757532812385
Comments
Post a Comment