
Haitians face record hunger as gang violence grips country in throes of economic crisis
More than half of Haiti's population is expected to experience severe hunger through June, and another 8,400 people living in makeshift shelters are projected to starve, according to a new report released this week.
Relentless gang violence and an ongoing economic collapse is to blame, according to an analysis from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a multi-partner U.N. initiative that analyzes food insecurity and malnutrition around the world.
It noted that the number of those facing severe hunger increased by more than 300,000 people to some 5.7 million since last year.
Among those going hungry is Jackie Jean-Jacques, his wife and their three sons, who lost their home to gang violence and have lived in a crowded makeshift shelter for more than a year.
'There are days where the kids have to live on sugar water and bread,' he said. 'It hurts me to see that.'
Jean-Jacques, 52, used to work as a bus driver but could no longer afford to rent the bus or buy gasoline. Besides, he worries that one day gangs would open fire on his public transportation vehicle like they have on others.
Meanwhile, his wife sells small items like plastic cups and lunch boxes on the street.
'This is not enough to feed us,' he said.
Dwindling aid
While food and potable water were commonly distributed at shelters, aid began to dwindle after the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump in late February decided to terminate 90% of USAID foreign aid contracts.
'Since March 2025, funding has no longer been guaranteed,' according to the report issued Monday.
It said that from August 2024 to February 2025, nearly 977,000 Haitians received humanitarian food aid monthly, although rations have been reduced by up to half.
'The assistance you get is not enough,' Jean-Jacques said.
UNICEF said Thursday that an estimated 2.85 million children — one quarter of Haiti's entire child population — 'are facing consistently high levels of food insecurity.'
The agency warned that it faces a 70% funding shortfall. It said it has helped more than 4,600 children this year with severe acute malnutrition, which represents only 4% of the estimated 129,000 children expected to need life-saving treatment this year.
Meanwhile, the U.N.'s World Food Program said it urgently needs $53.7 million to 'continue its life-saving operations in Haiti over the next six months."
'Right now, we're fighting to just hold the line on hunger,' Wanja Kaaria, WFP's country director in Haiti, said in a statement Thursday.
'I can barely feed them'
In 2014, only 2% of Haiti's population was food insecure, with gang violence largely under control and most people enjoying the successful spring harvests from the previous year, according to a previous report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification.
Hunger at that time affected mostly those in poor rural areas.
But in 2016, Hurricane Matthew battered Haiti as a Category 4 storm, destroying crops and livelihoods.
By 2018, more than 386,000 Haitians were experiencing severe hunger, a number that has since grown to an estimated 5.7 million.
'This is very alarming,' said Martin Dickler, Haiti director for the nonprofit CARE. 'It really is an extremely serious food crisis, and Haiti is one of the worst in the world.'
The growing hunger coincides with a surge in the price of goods, with inflation reaching more than 30% in recent months.
Experts also blame gang violence, with gunmen controlling the main roads leading in and out of the capital, Port-au-Prince, disrupting the transportation of goods from the countryside.
Jean Rose-Bertha, a single, 40-year-old mother of two boys, said they have lived almost a year at a makeshift shelter after gangs chased them from their home.
'I can barely feed them. I sometimes do things I'm not supposed to do,' she said, explaining that she prostitutes herself on occasion.
Dickler said women and girls have been disproportionately affected by the crisis, facing greater obstacles in accessing both food and livelihoods..
'They are left to manage the daily family survival,' he said. 'In food crises, women often eat least and last.'
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Coto reported from San Juan, Puerto Rico.
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Telegraph
38 minutes ago
- Telegraph
‘The cartels and clans are ecstatic': How USAID cuts have emboldened Colombia's narcos
US cuts to international aid spending have put Colombia's counter-narcotics operations 'on ice' – a development that experts warn will reenergise the country's notorious cartels. For decades, the US has supported Colombia in its fight against drug trafficking and armed groups through aid spending. Since helping to end the reign of infamous drug lord Pablo Escobar in the 1990s, US defence and intelligence agencies have been instrumental in the country's counter-narcotic operations. Washington has also been instrumental in helping demobilise the leftist FARC rebels since the 2016 peace accord, ushering in a period of relative stability. But now, following the Trump administration's freeze of nearly all funding for the US Agency for International Development (USAID), along with changes to US State Department spending, analysts and civil society leaders are sounding the alarm. 'The groups that operate outside of the law – the cartels and the clans – are happy. 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'Trump is right,' President Gustavo Petro said in a televised address earlier this year, where he also characterised US foreign aid as poison. 'Take your money.' Some also question whether the cuts will meaningfully impact drug trafficking, arguing that the US-led war on drugs has already failed, with consumption and cultivation at record highs. Isabel Pereira, a drug policy expert at Colombia-based research organisation DeJusticia, said that such programmes 'will never be enough' to stop drug trafficking. 'Coca as a cash crop will always be more profitable than any other crop,' she said. If the programmes had been successful, she argued, 'we wouldn't be in a situation today where we are at the highest number of hectares grown in Colombia.' 'I don't think it will have much of a differential effect because the fact of the matter is that the drug markets are always thriving,' Ms Pereira added. Although the high profile excesses associated with narcos like Mr Escobar are less prominent. Coca cultivation in Colombia has quadrupled over the last decade, while global cocaine production doubled. Drug use has also grown steadily, with the UN noting in 2024 that 292 million people worldwide reported having consumed narcotics in the previous year. The Colombian government, led by the country's first leftist president, Mr Petro, has already acted to reform drug policy. In October 2023, it launched a new national drug policy that aims to shift the narrative around psychoactive substances – focusing on rural development, reducing coca crops, and helping small farmers transition to the legal economy. In February, Mr Petro said that cocaine is 'not worse than whisky' and said that, like whisky, it should be legalised. 'If somebody wants peace, the business [of drug trafficking] has to be dismantled,' Mr Petro said. 'It could be easily dismantled if they legalised cocaine in the world. It would be sold like wine.' In March, Colombia went further, leading a landmark resolution at the UN commission on narcotic drugs, calling for reforms to the existing 60-year-old drug control system. 'The global drug regime has failed to deliver, period,' said Laura Gil, Colombia's ambassador-at-large for global drug policy, speaking on the sidelines of the Harm Reduction International conference. 'In my country, it has meant the fuelling of the internal armed conflict, it has meant thousands of deaths, and it has meant the stigma we carry as Colombians all over the world.' Catherine Cook of Harm Reduction International said US funding had long given Washington an 'element of control' over Colombia's drug policy. 'This is a moment for countries to be able to take back control and decide what they want to prioritise,' she said. Ms Dickinson agreed that drug policies have caused a 'very perverse fallout', but warned that cutting funding overnight 'empowers the criminal groups who are profiting from this business.' The USAID land programme source also acknowledged that 'not everything was perfect with USAID,' but countered that, on balance, 'more good' happened than bad. Mr Valencia, meanwhile, argued that the US's abrupt decision, if nothing else, amounted to a betrayal of its responsibilities. 'The US operation is an obligation. It is not a gift – the US is the main party responsible for consumption and the persecution of our poorest people,' he said. 'These funding cuts hurt efforts to repress trafficking, and the growers that no longer have support from the programmes. They are waiving all liability, and it is a great injustice.'


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
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The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
Justice Jackson warns Supreme Court is sending a 'troubling message'
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