The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting on Wednesday on the new escalation of violence in Haiti, where a gang leader has assured that a bloody “civil war” will take place if Prime Minister Ariel Henry does not resign.
Criminal gangs, who control the majority of the capital Port-au-Prince as well as the roads leading to the rest of the territory, have attacked strategic sites in the poor Caribbean country in recent days: the police academy, the airport and several prisons, from which thousands of inmates were able to escape.
“If Ariel Henry does not resign, if the international community continues to support him, we are heading straight towards a civil war which will lead to genocide,” threatened influential Haitian gang leader Jimmy Chérizier, nicknamed “Barbecue”, on Tuesday. during a press interview, surrounded by armed and hooded men.
“Either Haiti becomes a paradise for us all, or a hell for us all,” continued this 46-year-old former police officer, placed under UN sanctions and considered one of the most influential gang leaders.
Armed groups say they want to overthrow the prime minister in power since the assassination in 2021 of President Jovenel Moïse and who should have left office at the beginning of February.
Absent for several days from Haiti after a trip to Kenya, Ariel Henry landed in Puerto Rico on Tuesday, the spokesperson for the governor of this American Caribbean territory told AFP.
” Gear “
The US State Department announced Monday that the Prime Minister was on his way back to Port-au-Prince, but according to the Haitian media Radio Télé Métronome, he was unable to land in the capital due to the security situation at the airport.
In response to the violence, the government declared a state of emergency and a three-day nighttime curfew, renewable until Wednesday inclusive, while Ariel Henry was in Nairobi to try to finally put the future force on track. multinational intended to help the overwhelmed Haitian police.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres called this week for “urgent action”, in particular to finance the multinational mission which must “prevent the country from plunging even further into chaos”.
Its representative in the country, Maria Isabel Salvador, will provide an update on the situation by videoconference on Wednesday during the closed meeting of the Security Council.
The head of UNICEF Catherine Russell affirmed on X that the violence in Haiti was “spiraling out of control”.
“The world must not remain impassive. It is time to act,” she pleaded.
Multinational mission
Due to violence, political crisis and years of drought, 5.5 million Haitians, almost half the population, are in need of humanitarian assistance. But the UN appeal for donations, for an amount of $674 million for 2024, is only 2.5% funded.
And the new escalation in recent days has forced 15,000 people to flee their homes in Port-au-Prince, according to the UN, which has started to distribute food and basic necessities to them.
After months of procrastination, the UN Security Council finally gave its agreement in October for the sending to Haiti of a multinational mission led by Kenya which wants to send 1000 police officers. But its deployment is still pending, in particular due to a decision by the Kenyan courts.
To speed up implementation, Nairobi and Port-au-Prince signed a bilateral agreement on Friday, but no date has been given for the arrival of the mission.
At the end of February, five other countries, including Benin with more than 1,500 men, had officially notified their intention to participate in the field mission.
Kidnappings, snipers on rooftops, sexual violence used to instill fear… At the beginning of January, Antonio Guterres said he was “dismayed” by the “staggering level” of gang violence ravaging the country, noting that the number of homicides had more than doubled in 2023, with nearly 5,000 people killed, including 2,700 civilians.