Mélanie Joly announces that the last flight from Haiti for Canadians will take place on Sunday

The last assisted flight planned from Haiti for Canadians will take place on Sunday, said Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly.

The minister said the federal government had helped more than 250 Canadians, permanent residents and their eligible family members leave the country in recent weeks.

She added that the number of people “who are able or willing to leave Haiti on an assisted departure flight has decreased significantly,” and that, as a result, a final flight will depart on Sunday.

Ottawa indicated earlier this week that it was expanding its plan to evacuate people from Haiti to include relatives of Canadians and permanent residents. Until then, Canada had been transporting people with valid Canadian passports from Haiti to the neighboring Dominican Republic by helicopter.

“Extremely unstable”

“My message to Canadians, permanent residents and their eligible family members in Haiti is this: if you want to leave Haiti, now is the time to do so. If you would like us to help you do this, you should contact Global Affairs Canada,” reads a written statement from the minister on Friday.

Mme Joly also said that Canada’s missions in the region are actively monitoring a security situation in Haiti that remains “extremely unstable.”

This Caribbean country has been facing a political and humanitarian crisis since mid-2021. Gangs are committing violence across the country while limiting access to food and basic necessities.

The situation worsened further last month, when progress toward foreign military intervention prompted gangs to release prisoners and close Haiti’s main airport.

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