Haiti on verge of collapse, NGOs warn as UN talks on restoring order continue

Haitians currently facing series of crises that are becoming deadlier by the day with gangs, hunger and cholera outbreak

NGOs operating in Haiti warn that the chaos engulfing the country has become so total and the social fabric so torn that the country is on the verge of collapse, as discussions continue at the UN security council on how to restore order.

Haitians are currently facing a series of overlapping crises that are becoming deadlier by the day as heavily armed gangs continue to blockade the country’s principal port and fuel terminal.

The country is also experiencing its worst hunger in history as a deadly outbreak of cholera spreads and armed gangs increasingly targeting women and children with sexual violence as a form of warfare.

“In 20 years of working in Haiti, we have never seen something like this,” said Fiammetta Cappellini, country representative for the Avsi Foundation. “Violence is everywhere and touches everybody. The most vulnerable people are literally struggling to survive as humanitarian aid is failing to reach people.”

On Monday, the US and Mexico called for the formation of a non-UN multinational force to take down the gangs who now dominate much of Port-au-Prince.

Violence has mounted following the assassination of president Jovenel Moïse in July 2021 when the gangs – many of which have links to establishment politicians – exploited a power vacuum to seize more ground.

Now the factions dominating most of Port-au-Prince are using ever more brutal tactics to terrorise the population into submission, the UN’s human rights office said on Friday.

Gang rape of elderly women and girls as young as 10 years old has become a tool “to instil fear, punish, subjugate and inflict pain on local populations,” the UN concluded in its new report.

Among the tens of “gruesome testimonies” collected by the UN there were cases of children being raped for hours in front of their parents and in some cases by more than half a dozen armed men.

“Alarmingly the number of cases increases by the day as the humanitarian and human rights crisis in Haiti deepens,” said Nada Al-Nashif, the acting human rights chief.

Sexual violence is also being used against kidnap victims, the UN said. The organisation documented cases of gangs repeatedly raping women and girls for days or weeks while in captivity. In some cases the gangs send video recordings of the attacks to victims’ families to pressure them into paying for their release.

If not halted imminently the sexual violence will make any chance of reconciliation and peace-building in the country more challenging, the UN said.

“Such rampant use of sexual violence risks further shattering the already deeply fragile social fabric of Haitian society for years to come and may undermine prospects of sustainable development and lasting stability,” the report said.

Already dire hunger levels are also reaching unprecedented, “catastrophic” levels, the World Food Programme (WFP) warned on Friday.

A record 4.7 million people are facing acute hunger, with 1.8 million now at an emergency level of malnutrition.

For the first time thousands of Haitian are suffering level 5 hunger – the WFP’s highest alert level and one often reserved for wartime famine.

Malnutrition has long been rife in Port-au-Prince’s slums, but the paralysis of the country by gangs has caused hunger to reach life-or-death levels.

Many residents are unable to work due to severe petrol shortages and food prices are soaring, leaving 65% of Cite Soleil’s inhabitants regularly hungry and 5% of them needing urgent humanitarian assistance, the WFP says.

As cupboards go bare and water taps run dry, cholera disease has also returned to Haiti with cruel timing.

The bacterial disease can be deadly – particularly for the malnourished – and is probably spreading through Port-au-Prince’s shanty towns with ease, say medical NGOs, as there is little running water for sanitation.

Port-au-Prince’s national penitentiary has become a centre of the outbreak, with 14 deaths recorded in the overcrowded prison.

Haitian health authorities had recorded 425 suspected cases and 22 deaths as of 14 October.

Haiti’s last cholera outbreak began in 2010 and went on to kill 10,000 in the nine years it took to stamp out.

NGOs fear that history will repeat itself if an urgent solution is not found to pacify the violence and end food and water shortages.

“Haitian people can’t wait any longer,” said Judes Jonathas, who manages NGO Mercy Corps’ Haiti programme. “We cannot descend even further into this abyss. The urgency is now, to save what can be saved.”

As the number of victims of disease, malnutrition and gunshot wounds climbs, access to healthcare is shrinking as many hospitals remain closed due to national fuel shortages.

“The population is in an unprecedented and dramatic situation. Now it is really a matter of life or death on a daily basis,” Capellini said.

“The progressive destruction” of Haiti and its institutions will make any program to stabilise then rebuild it from a failed state into a functioning democracy a long and arduous one, said Jonathas.

“There is an absence of a clear policy and of governance at all levels, with all the structures needed to respond to the country’s problems having been weakened,” he said.

Any international solution must also include Haitians if it is to be a lasting one, he added. UN missions in Haiti have quelled violence in the past, but it swiftly returned once they departed.

“Solutions must be local, among Haitians, but of course with the involvement of our international partners. If we talk about solutions and forget once again the important Haitian actors, it will be a short-term solution to return with the same problems a few years later.”

Contributor

Luke Taylor

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Haiti deportations soar as Biden administration deploys Trump-era health order
There have been more ‘Title 42’ expulsions in the space of a few weeks than during an entire year of Trump’s administration, report says

Julian Borger in Washington

25, Mar, 2021 @9:00 AM

Article image
Haiti cancels carnival after gun battle between police and soldiers
Gunfire reportedly kills one soldier as authorities warn of risk of ‘bloodbath’

Peter Beaumont and agencies

24, Feb, 2020 @3:59 PM

Article image
Haiti: photojournalist shot in face as senator opens fire outside parliament
Jean Marie Ralph Féthière draws handgun and fires shots amid chaotic scenes as government tries to confirm appointment of new prime minister

Ruaridh Nicoll in Port-au-Prince

23, Sep, 2019 @6:30 PM

Article image
UN calls for foreign intervention in Haiti as violence surges
‘Specialized support force’ urged for Caribbean state where 530 have been killed in gang-led violence so far this year

Tom Phillips Latin America correspondent

21, Mar, 2023 @3:44 PM

Article image
Haiti security forces arrest six alleged gunmen after president’s assassination
Seven reportedly killed as angry civilians seize suspects following a brazen killing surrounded by claims of foreign involvement

Tom Phillips, Peter Beaumont and Jean Daniel Delone in Port-au-Prince

08, Jul, 2021 @7:53 PM

Article image
Haiti hit by storm as officials fear quake death toll could rise
Tropical depression makes landfall over areas already hit by Saturday’s quake that killed at least 1,419

Tom Phillips and Jean Daniel Delone in Port-au-Prince and Karen McVeigh

17, Aug, 2021 @6:02 AM

Article image
Haiti prosecutor calls for prime minister to be charged over president’s killing
Ariel Henry, 71-year-old neurosurgeon, became country’s leader in July, two weeks after assassination of Jovenel Moïse

Tom Phillips Latin America correspondent

14, Sep, 2021 @6:16 PM

Article image
‘It’s shocking’: Haiti struggles to piece together story of president’s murder
Mystery still surrounds the killing of Jovenel Moïse, and there are fears it could lead to further chaos

Tom Phillips and Jean Daniel Delone in Port-au-Prince

09, Jul, 2021 @4:36 PM

Article image
Haiti faces fresh cholera outbreak after Hurricane Matthew, aid agencies fear
At least 200 suspected cases of the waterborne disease have been reported and an urgent response is called for with thousands lacking access to clean water

Amanda Holpuch in New York

14, Oct, 2016 @10:00 AM

Article image
'It was like a monster': Hurricane Matthew leaves Haiti in crisis
With bridges down and communications patchy, the scale of devastation wreaked by the storm is just beginning to emerge

Sam Jones

07, Oct, 2016 @4:40 PM