Haiti in Criminal Free-Fall
"Heavily armed bandits are no longer satisfied with current abuses, racketeering, threats and kidnappings for ransom.""Now, criminals break into village homes at night, attack families and rape women."Petition for police action"The motive behind the surge in kidnapping for us is a financial one.""The gangs need money to buy ammunition, to get weapons, to be able to function."Center for Analysis and Research for Human Rights, Port-au-Prince"It's madness -- you try to work for the country, to build something, provide jobs, and they do this to you.""Where is this going? Where is this country going? It's a total mess."42-year-old businessman
A street vendor walks past tires set fire at a closed gas station as part of a protest against fuel shortages in Port-au-Prince on Thursday. (Joseph Odelyn/The Associated Press) |
Safety
and security of the person in Haiti? The country was always rife with
criminality and corruption but now it is an absolute basket case of a
crime wave that knows no boundaries. Violence is surging across the
country from its capital to its rural areas where entire towns have been
taken over by criminal gangs, and the residents have fled in terror.
In
Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, gangs are estimated to control about
half of the city. One day alone this month saw gangs shoot at a school
bus in the capital with five people injured, and another group of
criminals hijacked a public bus. It made international news, however,
when one of Haiti's most ambitiously notorious gangs kidnapped a group
of 17 social workers with the Christian Aid Ministries.
This
is a country economically bankrupt. International aid has always
reached Haiti but the country's needs are now so great such aid is no
longer even a stop-gap. There are shortages of everything; from fuel to
basic foodstuffs and medical supplies. People are desperate for relief,
many are on the brink of starvation, and violent protests against
government inaction take place on the streets. There is no end in sight
for the country's misery.
The
businessman who was bewailing the state of lawlessness in his country
had himself been kidnapped on his way home from work, in a bullet-proof
car. In fear of reprisals, he used only his first name, Norman, in
describing his kidnapping where he went unfed for the first four days of
his captivity when children who appeared to him no older than ten, beat
him with machete handles or gun butts.
Finally
released after 12 days when $70,000 in ransom was offered, a
considerable reduction from the $5 million the gang demanded to spare
his life, he speaks of at least ten others he knows who were snatched by
gangs demanding ransom be paid, among them his mother. The group
associated with the Chrisian Aid Ministries were on a visit to an
orphanage outside Port-au-Prince.
A protester threatens to throw stones at motorists trying to pass a road block set by anti-government demonstrators in Port-au-Prince on Thursday. (Odelyn Joseph/The Associated Press) |
The
shock assassination of President Jovenel Moise appeared to unleash the
country's security as its politics disintegrated, seemingly leaving no
one in charge. In Croix-des-Bouquets, a suburb of the capital, the
criminal gang known as 400 Mawozo, the same gang that kidnapped the
sixteen Americans and single Canadian in the latest bold escapade
demanding ransom, controls the town.
Shopkeepers
on the town's main street were kidnapped and ordered to sell their
possessions to pay off the ransom demanded by 400 Mawozo. As soon as
they were able, they all fled to safety elsewhere, but for the fact
there is no 'elsewhere' where there is safety in the impoverished
country where criminality is rampant and the population cowers in fear,
unable to go to work, to send their children to school.
Gang
members recruit local children, encouraging youths to beat people as
part of their training, with the intention of producing a more violent
generation of gang members. Churches have become frequent targets,
priests kidnapped while addressing their congregations, even when a
church ceremony is being streamed live on Facebook.
Seven
Catholic clergy, five Haitian, two French were among ten people
kidnapped in Croix-des-Bouquets by the 400-Mawozo gang in April;
eventually released once ransom was paid, but unlikely to have been the
$1 million demanded by the gang. The ransom demanded for the 17
kidnapped aid workers is $1 million for each to be released, a total of
$17 million. One priest whose ransom had been paid, has never been
released.
People protest for the release of kidnapped missionaries in Titanyen, north of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Tuesday. (Joseph Odelyn/The Associated Press) |
Labels: Corruption, Crime-Ridden, Haiti, Impoverished, Kidnapping
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