logo
Haiti turns to weaponized drones in fight against gangs

Haiti turns to weaponized drones in fight against gangs

Boston Globe10-04-2025

Advertisement
'If the intention is to create the illusion that the situation is under control, this is quite the opposite,' said Romain Le Cour Grandmaison, a Haiti
analyst at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime. 'This is a very, very dangerous escalation.'
A humanitarian worker in Port-au-Prince said aid groups are figuring out how to adapt.
'We work in places where thousands of people are present,' said the aid worker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. 'This situation is clearly dangerous for civilians, especially if something were to detonate during a distribution.'
Since drones were first deployed in early March, they have not killed any gang leaders. But they have injured at least nine civilians, including women
and children, according to a health care worker who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals by Haitian officials. Two had such severe burns that they were transferred to specialized facilities for treatment.
Advertisement
Little is known about the drones. Haitians say they see them and hear the explosions. Gang leaders post videos of them in their territory and the injuries they say they have sustained from them. They appear to be commercial drones that were weaponized with improvised munitions, analysts say.
It's also unclear who is in charge of the drone operations.
Neither Haiti's interim government nor its police have publicly claimed responsibility for them. But a Haitian government official said the unit is run by a task force created this year by interim prime minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé and the transitional presidential council.
'They have no transparency,' said Nathalye Cotrino, a senior researcher for the Americas at Human Rights Watch, 'and we haven't seen any accountability.'
The Haitian official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive security issue, defended the drone operations. Haiti, he said, is 'at war.' The drones have killed 'many' gang members, though he did not have a number, and without them, he said, the gangs would have taken over the affluent neighborhood of Pétion-Ville.
The drones are being used to target gang strongholds that civilians have already fled, he added. But when asked about the civilian casualties - which have not been previously reported - he said they would not be a 'surprise.'
'Let's be honest - it's inevitable,' the official said, adding, 'To me, it's just a detail. As long as you're in a zone controlled by gangs and there are attacks, collateral damage is going to happen.'
Advertisement
The official said the task force responsible for the drones includes specialized police units. But Haitian National Police spokesman Lionel Lazarre said police use drones for surveillance and referred questions about weaponized drones to the government. Godfrey Otunge, the commander of a UN-backed, Kenya-led international police mission to Haiti, said that the force does not use weaponized drones and that Haiti's transitional government is in charge. Neither the secretary of state for public security nor a spokesman for Haiti's transitional presidential council responded to requests for comment.
Canada and the United States, which have provided equipment for the Haitian police, said their support has not included lethal drones or logistical support or training for their use. A spokesman for Canada's Foreign Ministry said that 'to our knowledge, neither the Haitian National Police nor the Haitian military forces were involved in the new Haitian task force's drone attacks.'
Analysts worry that Haiti's gangs could now be spurred to add weaponized drones to their arsenals.
'Be careful,' Jimmy 'Barbecue' Chérizier, one of Haiti's most powerful gang leaders, warned authorities in a video after a drone attack failed to kill him last month. 'The world sells everything. I can buy what you bought.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

13-year-old girl reported missing from Xenia
13-year-old girl reported missing from Xenia

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

13-year-old girl reported missing from Xenia

The Greene County Sheriff's Office is searching for a missing girl from Xenia. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Khloe Richmond, 13, was last seen wearing black pants and a black hoodie. Richmond has red hair and green eyes, according to the sheriff's office. TRENDING STORIES: Video released of moments leading up to officer shooting armed man DHS revokes temporary status of Haitians, other nationalities; confusion sets in Man arrested, accused of sex offence with child under 10-years-old According to the sheriff's office, Richmond could be in the Columbus area. If anyone has information on Richmond's whereabouts, they should contact the Greene County Sheriff's Office. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Trump again singles out Springfield, immigrants in social media rant
Trump again singles out Springfield, immigrants in social media rant

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump again singles out Springfield, immigrants in social media rant

Jun. 13—Springfield was a specific topic of more immigration-focused rhetoric from President Donald Trump this week on his social media platform Truth Social. In a post Thursday, Trump said of immigrants, "They have stolen American jobs, consumed billions of dollars in free welfare, and turned once idyllic communities, like Springfield, Ohio, into Third World nightmares," Trump wrote. "I campaigned on, and received a historic mandate for, the largest mass deportation program in American history." Trump and the Department of Homeland Security in the past month have sped up efforts to deport more immigrants, in part by revoking certain people's status. The vast majority of Haitian immigrants in Springfield are believed to have entered the United States on humanitarian parole — a then-legal program that Trump's team has since ended — and many have received other immigration designations such as Temporary Protected Status. Thursday's post contained Trump's frequent claims that illegal immigrants had "destroyed" America's schools, hospitals, parks and more, and that his deportation plan was about "saving America." Ohio's Republican governor Mike DeWine, asked about the friction between the Trump administration and Haitians in Springfield, spoke up for the immigrants Friday. "The Haitians who are here, they're working every day, they show up every day," DeWine said. "They want what every other person in this country wants, and that is, they want to support their families. ... Those are just the facts. Again, I don't control what's going to happen." Trump's post, on the other hand, said many illegal immigrants are "murderers, rapists and terrorists." This isn't the first time Trump has singled out Springfield. In September, he and other Republican figures amplified false rumors that Haitian immigrants here were eating pets. At a New York campaign rally that month, he continued his rhetoric: "How about in Springfield, Ohio? ... This is a little, beautiful town. No crime, no problem," Trump said. "Thirty-two-thousand illegal immigrants come into the town so, they almost double their population in a period of a few weeks. Can you believe it?" Neither the "no crime" claim, nor the number of immigrants he cited, nor their legal status, nor the timeframe for their arrival, were accurate. In his address to Congress in March, Trump said Springfield and Aurora, Colorado, had "buckled under the weight of the migrant occupation and corruption like no one's ever seen before. Beautiful towns destroyed." Springfield Mayor Rob Rue, also a Republican, quickly responded to Trump's claims in March. "The greatest hardship we have faced in the past six months is the mischaracterization of our city. We need to be recognized as a community that, despite its challenges, is continuing to move forward and is far from being destroyed," Rue said.

People Keep Refusing to Become Pete Hegseth's Top Aides
People Keep Refusing to Become Pete Hegseth's Top Aides

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

People Keep Refusing to Become Pete Hegseth's Top Aides

Chief of staff to the secretary of defense is usually a prestigious and sought-after job, but under Pete Hegseth, the White House is reportedly having trouble filling it. At least three people have turned down top Defense Department jobs—including chief of staff and several senior adviser roles—since Hegseth abruptly fired three of his top aides in April and accused them of leaking information to the press, NBC News reported. Hegseth's former chief of staff Joe Kasper was also pushed out of the Pentagon following what insiders described as a vicious 'turf war.' Even with Vice President JD Vance and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles taking an active interest in helping Hegseth recover from earlier missteps that raised questions about his leadership, the positions have remained vacant for more than six weeks, according to NBC. Wiles and Vance have looked for candidates inside the White House and on Capitol Hill, but Hegseth—a former Army National Guard officer turned Fox News weekend host—has reportedly rejected the White House's choices. The White House personnel office has also deemed some of the candidates insufficiently MAGA. In a statement to the Daily Beast, chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said, 'The anonymous sources cited in this article have no idea what they're talking about. Since November 5, 2024, the US military has seen the highest recruiting percentage of mission achieved in 30 years. There has never been more enthusiasm to serve under Secretary Hegseth's leadership at the DoD.' White House deputy press secretary Anna Kelly also said in a statement that Hegseth had the White House's 'full support.' 'Thanks to Secretary Hegseth's leadership, military recruitment is up, terrorists are eliminated, and warfighters are prioritized,' she said. Hegseth, who remains largely isolated since firing his own inner circle, relies heavily on an aide named Ricky Buria, who left the military in April in hopes of replacing Hegseth's former chief of staff. The White House, however, refused to give Buria the green light because he's a Biden administration holdover who once called Vance's isolationist views 'wackamamie crazy.' The career Marine was particularly critical of the vice president's opposition to the administration's March airstrikes on Yemen's Iran-backed Houthis, the New York Post reported. Those strikes were the subject of the now-infamous Signal group chat in which Hegseth shared war plans with The Atlantic's editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg, who was accidentally added to the group by former National Security Adviser Mike Waltz. A Pentagon inspector general report is expected to conclude that Hegseth shared classified information on the chat, according to NBC. The defense secretary has also reportedly shared sensitive information about the Yemen operation in yet another Signal chat with his wife, his personal attorney, and his brother. Hegseth accused his fired aides Dan Caldwell, Colin Carroll, and Darin Selnick of leaking the details of the second chat, a claim the three men deny. They've slammed their dismissals as 'unconscionable' and said no evidence was ever presented to them. Originally Hegseth and his personal attorney Tim Parlatore were responsible for overseeing the investigation into the fired aides, but in May, White House officials instructed the deputy defense secretary to handle the probe instead. The investigation has not revealed any evidence the men were leaking, leading administration officials to question if the firings had been premature, according to NBC. Carroll told SiriusXM host Megyn Kelly in late April that Hegseth spent at least half of his time investigating leaks and had created a culture of 'fear and toxicity.' Given the recruitment problems the White House is now having, word seems to have gotten around.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store