Tuesday, February 4, 2025 - Haiti has been rocked by a massacre after heavily armed gangs attacked a neighbourhood that is home to most of the country's elite and left at least 40 dead.
According to Mayor Jean Massillon, the affluent Kenscoff
neighbourhood in Port-au-Prince has been under attack for eight days, with
gunmen going home to home and indiscriminately opening fire on civilians.
He blamed the attack on the violent Viv Ansanm gang
coalition, which controls much of the Haitian capital.
'As we speak, they have surrounded the area,' Massillon said
as he called for reinforcements.
The dead include pastors, teachers, and children, although
the number is expected to be higher because authorities haven't been able to
reach certain parts of the neighbourhood, which is also home to many
politicians and business leaders.
Many victims are working-class people who tend crops on the
outskirts of the neighbourhood in the foothills of a mountain range.
Gangs already control 85% of Port-au-Prince, and
the United Nations secretary-general warned last month they could
soon overrun the capital.
The assault on Kenscoff occurred days after the government
and police warned about imminent attacks in the Haitian city, but the warnings
did not say where they might occur.
Jean Bertho Valmo, a 45-year-old farmer who fled Kenscoff,
told the Associated Press that 12 members of one family were among the dead.
He said he woke to another round of gunfire before dawn
Monday. He and his family sought shelter in the yard of the mayor's office
along with dozens of others.
'There is not enough water and food for everyone,' he said,
and lamented the loss of his crops including cabbage, carrots and broccoli.
'I invested everything I had in them,' Valmo said. 'The
police and the government need to put a stop to this.'
The attack on Kenscoff that began on January 27 has left
more than 1,660 people homeless, the International Organization for
Migration said on Monday.
Overall, gang violence has left more than 1 million people
homeless across Haiti in recent years.
On Friday, one police union said the attack on Kenscoff
'could have been avoided if police had good equipment' including a helicopter
and an all-terrain vehicle, as well as funds to gather intelligence.
'Despite these bad conditions, our policemen are making
tireless sacrifices, but we cannot tolerate the negligence of the authorities
on what must be done to protect their lives and the safety of the population,'
the union, SPNH-17, said in a statement.
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