International Haiti declares State of Emergency after Prisoners overrun the country; 5400 inmates escape

I'm surprised someone hasn't said something dumb like "They're Welcome Here".... We need to militarize our border years ago and shut it down.
Even the hard-core open border libs wouldn't wish that on their worst neighbor. Easiest way to solve it---No single males let in at all. We see what the Venezuelan and El Salvadorian criminals are doing here....people truly have no idea the level these gang member Haitians are. Murder is a way of life.
 
Even the hard-core open border libs wouldn't wish that on their worst neighbor. Easiest way to solve it---No single males let in at all. We see what the Venezuelan and El Salvadorian criminals are doing here....people truly have no idea the level these gang member Haitians are. Murder is a way of life.
Yep...We've already had more illegal unvetted illegal males break into this country then the population of many major cities...Pretty soon we're going to have college students get murdered and minors getting raped... Wait to late for that.
 
There are 200 gangs in Haiti fighting for control but the two biggest are G9 and Fanmi e Alye. The latter is run by a former police chief nicknamed Jimmy BBQ. It's not because he likes BBQ.

Fanmi e Alye is not something separate from G9, they're the same thing. Barbecue runs the entire G9.
 
It's sad but not surprising to see what's going on. The country has been through so much shit. People will only look at it from today's perspective, which is obviously a disaster, but it deserved better.
 
It's sad but not surprising to see what's going on. The country has been through so much shit. People will only look at it from today's perspective, which is obviously a disaster, but it deserved better.
Meanwhile the cruise lines set up paradise areas on the corners of Haiti with huge gates around them. The locals hang on the fences looking at people eating, drinking, dancing....it is some fucked up stuff.
 
Anymore I about expect Biden to say he will bring the violent Haiti prisoners to America and turn them into lifeguards.


NYC Mayor Seeks Illegal Alien Migrant Lifeguards​

“I would love to get migrants and asylum seekers to help with the lifeguard shortage."​



 
They might be but shouldn't be unless they are women or children.

"Undocumented" doesn't exist there is only legal and illegal.

Unless you think a drug dealer is an "Undocumented" pharmacist.

- The guys always let the females behind!
I do agree woman (even thought i dont know whats this is) should get preference.
Haiti is a hell on Earth.
 
Hell on earth. I never hear anything positive about Haiti - ever.
- My first memory of reading this name, was a very young girl, holding a little kid. And the story said they kill the children, to rape the mother.

I'm sure theres good people here of course.
 
It's a crime against humanity that the west, particularly the US, hasn't stepped up to rescue Haiti.

Given its extremely small geographical size, and population, it would not take a whole lot of investment to get Haiti up to at least a second world standard. It's the west that completely raped and fucked Haiti up, so it's their moral imperative to step-up and fucking do something. There is absolutely NO reason for Haiti to be in such a dire state. I wish all the good people of Haiti the best and I pray that better days are ahead.
 
Meanwhile the cruise lines set up paradise areas on the corners of Haiti with huge gates around them. The locals hang on the fences looking at people eating, drinking, dancing....it is some fucked up stuff.

- I've seen those videos. Poor children on the other side of the gate. Maybe that's the reason they dont work on a fix?
 

There's chaos in Haiti. Powerful gangs are attacking key targets like prisons as alliances shift​

Gangs in Haiti are increasingly powerful, and they've been attacking prisons and the main international airport
ByDÁNICA COTO Associated Press
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Increasingly powerful gangs have attacked prisons and the airport serving Haiti's capital in recent days, forcing businesses and schools to close as hundreds of people fled.

Heavily armed gangs have grown more powerful than Haiti's weak government and they now control some 80% of the capital, according to the United Nations.

The latest attacks began Thursday as Prime Minister Ariel Henry flew to Kenya to push for the U.N.-backed deployment of a police force to help fight the gangs.

Heavy gunfire has echoed daily in the capital, overwhelming government forces. Frantz Elbé, director of the National Police, told Radio Caraïbes late last week that the recent attacks had left many of his officers unable to respond.

“The city center was at war,” he said.
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Most residents were already staying indoors at night for self-protection. Government officials imposed a three-day nightly curfew that began Monday in an effort to help curb the violence.

Here's what to know about the latest crisis:

Some of Haiti’s most powerful gang leaders say their goal is bringing down Henry.

The country has failed to hold parliamentary and general elections in recent years and there are no elected officials. Henry was sworn in as prime minister with the backing of the international community after the July 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse. The latest round of attacks began in February after Henry pledged to hold long-awaited general elections by mid-2025.

On Saturday, gunmen overwhelmed the main penitentiary in the Port-au-Prince capital and another nearby prison, freeing thousands of inmates in a raid that left several people dead.

Henry’s whereabouts were not public Monday. When asked in Kenya if it was safe for him to return to Haiti, Henry shrugged.
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Jimmy Chérizier, a former elite police officer known as “Barbecue” who is considered one of Haiti’s most powerful gang leaders, announced as gunmen began to attack infrastructure that he would try and capture the country’s police chief and government ministers.

Four police officers were killed when their stations came under siege.

Cherizier said last summer that he would fight any international armed force if they committed abuses, and he urged Haitians to mobilize against the government.

Other gang leaders also appear to be involved in recent attacks.


Johnson André, best known as “Izo” and leader of the 5 Seconds gang, appears in a video posted on TikTok wielding a heavy mallet in his right hand as he pretends to punch his face with his left hand.

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Izo’s gang is considered an ally of G-Pep, archenemy of Barbecue’s gang federation, but alliances have been shifting in recent days.

A report released last month by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime found that “for the gangs, the development of alliances is a fluid phenomenon.”

It also noted how “only the most powerful gangs — such as Izo’s or Chérizier’s — are usually able to operate or profiteer outside their fiefdoms.”

Barbecue is leader of a gang federation known as G9 Family and Allies, and he has previously launched powerful attacks that have crippled the country. In late 2022, he seized control of an area surrounding a key fuel terminal in the capital of Port-au-Prince for almost two months.

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An estimated 200 gangs exist in Haiti, with 23 main ones believed to be operating in the metropolitan area of Port-au-Prince.

Up until recent years, they controlled some 60% of the capital, a number that has since grown to 80%, according to U.N. officials.

Smuggled firearms and ransom payments to kidnappers have allowed gangs to become more financially independent. That has increased their power as the state has weakened, and an underfunded and under-resourced police department has been unable to contain them.

“Present-day gangs enjoy a much higher degree of military capacity than those a decade ago,” according to the Global Initiative report. “This has largely been driven by the gangs’ ability to acquire high-caliber weapons.”

A 2023 U.N. report stated that recovered weapons destined for Haitian ports include “.50 caliber sniper rifles, .308 rifles, and even belt-fed machine guns.”

Finance Minister Patrick Boivert, who is serving as acting prime minister, declared a state of emergency late Sunday and said officials were imposing an evening curfew to “take appropriate measures in order to regain control of the situation.”

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The three-day curfew began Monday and runs from 6 p.m. to 5 a.m.

“Police were ordered to use all legal means at their disposal to enforce the curfew and apprehend all offenders,” Boivert said in a statement.

https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...gangs-attacking-key-targets-prisons-107786293
 
They're still waiting for that Clinton Foundation money. Chelsae had a lovely wedding though.

They would have had their cents off Hillary's dollars years ago. They've had billions in foreign aid and charitable donations over the years. The whole place is a textbook example of throwing good money after bad.
 

Haiti crisis: Is a gang-led coup next?​

Haiti is in chaos after a massive prison break and gangs calling for the resignation of its prime minister. How did it get here?


Haiti’s government declared a 72-hour state of emergency on Sunday after armed gang members stormed the Caribbean nation’s two biggest prisons, freeing more than 4,700 inmates.

In capital Port-au-Prince, corpses lie in neighbourhoods and burning tyres serve as roadblocks.

Meanwhile, the whereabouts of Prime Minister Ariel Henry are unknown, after he visited Kenya last week. Finance Minister Patrick Boivert, as acting prime minister, announced the curfew.

How did Haiti get to this point?​

At least 12 people have been reported dead, four of them being police officers.

Gangs have targeted police stations including the national penitentiary, the Toussaint Louverture International Airport, and even the national soccer stadium. A second prison in Port-au-Prince containing around 1,400 inmates was also overrun.

Yet the violence has roots in turbulent political history that has shaped — and continues to shape — Haiti.

1959: A failed coup by military officials and foreigners to overthrow President Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier, led him to create his secret police force, the Tonton Macoutes, to serve as a counterweight to the army.

1990s: Former parish priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a left-wing champion of the poor, won Haiti’s first free election in 1990. He was removed in a coup in 1991 to be replaced by Rene Preval.

2000: In the early 2000s, Aristide formed his own armed gangs known as the Chimeres, serving as a protection racket and an instrument of political opposition. In 2001, Aristide was sworn in as president again.

2004: A prominent gang, known as the Cannibal Army at the time, also called the Artibonite Resistance Front, seized control of Gonaives, a commune in northern Haiti on February 5. Later that month, they took control of the country’s second-biggest city, Cap-Haitien. As the gang attacked Port-au-Prince, Aristide resigned, amid allegations of French and US support for the coup plotters because of Aristide’s call for reparations — claims that Paris and Washington have denied.

2010: A catastrophic earthquake killed between 100,000 and 300,000 people, according to various estimates. The earthquake also led to former gang members escaping prison and taking over makeshift camps, originally made for earthquake victims. Gender-based violence perpetrated by gangs also began to rise.

2011-14: Michel Martelly won the presidential elections. But amid mounting anger over corruption and poverty, large anti-government protests broke out against his government.

2017: Banana exporter-turned-politician Jovenel Moise was declared the winner of the 2016 presidential election.


2018: Members of the Moise government allegedly helped gangs commit massacres by providing them with money, weapons and government vehicles used in attacks on the capital.

2019: Due to a political gridlock and unrest, Haiti failed to hold new elections, leading to Moise steadily amassing power.

2021: Thousands protested on the streets calling for Moise’s resignation, chanting “No to dictatorship”. Moise was assassinated in July by Colombian mercenaries with unknown paymasters. Ariel Henry was sworn in as prime minister with the help of international backing after Moise’s assassination.

How much power do gangs have in Haiti?​

Gangs hold considerable influence in Haiti. Until recently, they controlled around 60 percent of the capital, and United Nations (UN) officials say that number has grown to 80 percent. Around 200 gangs exist in Haiti, and 23 dominant ones are believed to be operating in the metropolitan capital.

Firearms – typically smuggled from the United States, alongside ransom payments to kidnappers – have lent financial independence to gangs. An underfunded and under-resourced police department has also allowed the gangs to amass power that the state has struggled to match.


“Present-day gangs enjoy a much higher degree of military capacity than those a decade ago,” according to a report by the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, a non-governmental organisation headquartered in Geneva. “This has largely been driven by the gangs’ ability to acquire high-caliber weapons.”

A 2023 UN report stated that recovered weapons destined for Haitian ports include “.50 caliber sniper rifles, .308 rifles, and even belt-fed machine guns”.

Since the recent outbreak of violence, around 15,000 people have fled the capital, as estimated by the International Organization for Migration. Many of the people who escaped were already previously displaced and in makeshift camps in schools, hospitals and public squares.

In 2023 alone, around 200,000 residents fled the kidnappings, looting and sexual violence related to gangs. Around 3,000 people were killed as a result of gang violence and 1,500 were kidnapped for ransom.

Why did the violence escalate?​

Analysts believe the escalating violence is aimed at ousting Henry — it has coincided with the prime minister’s visit to Kenya, where he has pushed for the UN-backed deployment of an international force to help fight the gangs.

Henry had repeatedly requested for international intervention in Haiti and in July 2023, Kenya stepped up and volunteered to lead an international force to combat the gang violence. Kenya promised to “deploy a contingent of 1,000 police officers to help train and assist Haitian police”.

In January, a Kenyan court blocked the deployment of that force, but during his visit to Nairobi, Henry inked a pact with Kenyan President William Ruto for a reciprocal deal that they suggested could allow the East African nation to send soldiers to Haiti.

Separately, on October 2, 2023, the UN adopted a resolution authorising the creation and year-long deployment of a “Multinational Security Support” (MSS) mission to reinforce the Haitian police, restore security and protect critical infrastructure. The Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Benin and Chad formally pledged troops to this force, and less than $11m was deposited in its fund.

However, a date for when the troops will be deployed is still not set.

Could gangs overthrow the government?​

Gangs already act as de facto authorities in parts of the country.

Gang leaders — Jimmy “Barbecue” Cherizier is the most prominent among them — want to bring down Henry. The country has failed to hold parliamentary and general elections since 2019 and there are no elected officials. The latest round of attacks also came amid Henry’s pledge to hold long-awaited general elections by mid-2025.


Cherizier is a former elite police officer, now considered one of Haiti’s most powerful gang leaders. He announced that he would try and capture the country’s police chief and government ministers.

Last summer, Cherizier urged Haitians to mobilise against the government, adding that he would fight any international armed force if they committed abuses.

Cherizer leads a gang federation known as G9 Family and Allies, and he has previously launched powerful attacks that have crippled the country. In late 2022, he seized control of an area surrounding a key fuel terminal in the capital of Port-au-Prince for almost two months.

How is the world reacting?​

The US Embassy in Haiti released a statement on Sunday, urging US citizens in Haiti to depart from the country “as soon as possible”. The embassy also said that it will operate at limited capacity starting Monday and all visa appointments from Monday to Wednesday have been cancelled.

The neighbouring Bahamas said it had called most of its embassy staff back, leaving just its charge d’affaires and two security attaches, while Mexico said its nationals should limit themselves to essential transit and stock up on water, fuel and nonperishables.

Haiti shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic, which last year deported tens of thousands of Haitians. The Dominican Republic announced on Monday that its defence minister was touring the border to supervise progress on a border fence, while the president ruled out opening refugee camps for Haitians in the country.

The security situation in Haiti has caused aid groups to pause their work in the country, according to the International Rescue Committee, which works with the groups.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/3/5/haiti-crisis-is-a-gang-led-coup-next


- Just send those dorks!


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US says no troops to Haiti as country reels from explosion of gang violence​

Washington says no despite ‘frantic’ talks between diplomats, as bodies lie in street and army battles gun-toting gang members
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The United States has said it will not send troops to Haiti after a stunning eruption of gang violence seemingly designed to bring down the Caribbean nation’s enfeebled government and its unpopular prime minister, Ariel Henry.

On Monday night, nearly five days after powerful organized crime bosses launched a wave of deadly and apparently coordinated attacks, the US news group McClatchy reported there had been “frantic” exchanges between US and Haitian diplomats that had raised the prospect of an emergency deployment of US special forces to help restore order.

However, a national security council official poured cold water on the suggestion there would be US “boots on the ground” in Haiti, telling the Washington-based agency: “The United States is not sending US troops to Haiti to support the Haitian national police’s security operations.”

More than 2,300km south in Haiti’s seaside capital, Port-au-Prince, the mood remained jittery and uncertain amid the still-developing gang uprising that has seen rifle-toting combatants target highly strategic and symbolic locations including police stations, penitentiaries, a container port and the city’s international airport, where residents could hear intense gunfire as army troops sought to repel heavily armed invaders.
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“There has been a lot of shooting since yesterday. We can still hear them in the distance,” said Yolette Jeanty, a human rights activist who lives near the airport.

“Everyone is hiding behind their doors at home – we can’t go anywhere. My colleague had to turn back on Sunday when he went out on to the streets because there were too many corpses on his route,” Jeanty added.

“To protect ourselves … everyone has to barricade themselves in at home.”

Thousands of prisoners, among them hardened gangsters, murderers and kidnappers, fled Haiti’s two main jails after gang fighters stormed those decrepit installations. On Sunday night, the government declared a three-day state of emergency.

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Police appeared to have largely retreated from the city’s eerily quiet downtown area, and many banks, businesses and government offices were closed. Three decomposing bodies still lay outside the wreckage of the national penitentiary, where cells were empty and the entrance wide open. Locals covered their noses to avoid the stench. Another eight corpses could be seen splayed out on the ground in nearby neighbourhoods.

“We’re not quite sure who they are,” said a local taxi driver who gave his name as Wisly. “Someone from the area set them on fire this morning.”

Romain Le Cour, a security specialist who was in Port-au-Prince when the attacks began, said the precise objective of the gang offensive remained unclear. “But the scale of the attacks is unprecedented,” added Le Cour, a senior expert from the Geneva-based civil society group Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.

“The level of violence and firepower that has been deployed over the past five days is incredible … It has been days of fighting and the gangs just keep on going,” Le Cour said, describing how gang members had also launched a ghoulish propaganda campaign in which videos of police officers being killed or tortured were posted on social media or even sent to the families of victims.
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“This is something that sends a phenomenal message of superpower and terror,” Le Cour said.

Jean-Marc Biquet, the head of the Médecins Sans Frontières mission in Haiti, said its trauma centre near Port-au-Prince’s airport had been overwhelmed by patients suffering bullet wounds. Many were women and children hit by stray bullets in the arms, legs and stomach.

“[The city centre] is a battlefield … Around the airport is really tense,” said Biquet who was unsure who currently wielded power in the city.

“Who is in control? I think nobody is in control,” the MSF chief said. “And my personal fear is that the policemen are going to [give up fighting and say]: ‘It’s a lost battle.’

“Then what can happen? Well I guess, total chaos,” Biquet added on Tuesday morning.

Henry, who also acts as Haiti’s president, was out of the country when the violence began last week and has so far been unable to return. On Tuesday afternoon, the embattled politician landed in Puerto Rico’s capital, San Juan, after reportedly being denied permission to land in the Dominican Republic, which shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti, for reasons that were not immediately clear. The Dominican newspaper Listín Diario reported that Henry had tried to fly there from Teterboro airport in New Jersey earlier in the day.

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When the violence erupted last Thursday, Henry, who took power after the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, was flying to Kenya to meet its president, William Ruto. The trip was part of efforts to speed up the controversial deployment of 1,000 Kenyan police officers to Haiti as part of a UN-backed police force supposed to restore some measure of calm to a nation which suffered nearly 4,800 murders last year.

The west African country of Benin has offered to send 2,000 police officers.

Haiti’s gangs have vastly expanded their grip on the country since Moïse’s murder, with some 80% of its capital said to fall under their control, even before last week’s offensive.

Some analysts suspect the criminal assault – which has claimed at least nine lives, including those of four police officers – is designed to dissuade the international community from sending its security force to confront them.

“They are making this great show of force to show what they are capable of in case eventual confrontations with foreign personnel,” said Diego Da Rin, a Haiti expert from the International Crisis Group who recently visited the country.

“They are also sending a very clear message to [Henry’s] interim government saying that they can at any moment bring the Haitian state to its knees when they wish to do so.

“The message is: we have a united front, we are able to completely overwhelm the Haitian security forces and we can strike simultaneously on several fronts effectively.”

Addressing reporters in Port-au-Prince last week, Jimmy Chérizier, a notorious gang boss nicknamed “Barbecue”, claimed responsibility for the attacks and said he was leading a crusade against Haiti’s prime minister alongside a coalition of other gangs.
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“We have chosen to take our destiny in our own hands. The battle we are waging will not only topple Ariel’s government. It is a battle that will change the whole system,” Chérizier said in a statement.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/mar/05/haiti-gangs-no-us-troops
 
It's a crime against humanity that the west, particularly the US, hasn't stepped up to rescue Haiti.

Given its extremely small geographical size, and population, it would not take a whole lot of investment to get Haiti up to at least a second world standard. It's the west that completely raped and fucked Haiti up, so it's their moral imperative to step-up and fucking do something. There is absolutely NO reason for Haiti to be in such a dire state. I wish all the good people of Haiti the best and I pray that better days are ahead.
Haiti genocided all Europeans in their land. It would be like Hitler asking Jews to invest in the Third Reich. At least they have a land of their own, many are not so fortunate.
 

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