The recent mass killing in Haiti has shocked the world, with the United Nations now reporting that a total of 207 people were brutally murdered by a gang. Among the victims were older individuals and Vodou religious leaders, who were taken from their homes and places of worship, interrogated, and then mercilessly executed before their bodies were burned and thrown into the sea.
This horrific event took place in the Wharf Jeremie neighborhood of Cite Soleil, a coastal slum in the capital city, Port-au-Prince, between December 6 and 11. The UN’s investigation revealed that 134 men and 73 women were slaughtered in this senseless act of violence.
The situation in Haiti has become increasingly dire, leading to UN personnel being ordered to leave the country or relocate to safer areas. The closure of the international airport in Port-au-Prince due to gunfire has further isolated the nation, raising concerns about food insecurity and the recruitment of children by gangs.
Efforts to restore law and order in Haiti have been met with challenges, prompting discussions about a potential return to a full-scale peacekeeping operation. The current transitional government, formed after the assassination of President Jovenel Moise, struggles to maintain control over the capital as gangs continue to battle for control of key areas.
The killings in Wharf Jeremie were reportedly sparked by the death of the son of a local gang leader known as “King Micanor”, who believed that residents had cast a curse on his child. This tragic event adds to the already devastating toll of gang violence in Haiti, with thousands of lives lost or injured in recent years.
The UN has called for a thorough investigation and the prosecution of those responsible for these heinous crimes, as Haiti grapples with a crisis of unimaginable proportions.