logo
Haiti's volatile capital is in a free fall. Here's what its collapse could look like

Haiti's volatile capital is in a free fall. Here's what its collapse could look like

Miami Herald24-03-2025
For months, Haiti's criminal gangs have been pushing the country's capital further into chaos, forcing the shutdown of public offices and schools and sending tens of thousands of people under a hail of gunfire into soiled makeshift camps with no potable water, no latrines and no hope.
Avenue John Brown, one of three main roads that connect downtown Port-au-Prince to affluent Pétion-Ville, was once a scene of teeming street merchants and bumper-to-bumper traffic. Now, its lower reaches have been transformed into heaps of destruction as residents and businesses flee the historical downtown area, and police try to resist the onslaught of the heavily armed gunmen.
The situation is critical in downtown Port-au-Prince, where gangs have been fighting to secure control over the neighborhoods of Canapé-Vert and Pacot. Control of the residential communities and others nearby would put gangs within reach of Pétion-Ville and allow them to further control the region's key resources.
From Carrefour Feuilles and Christ-Roi to Nazon and Delmas, Haiti's most powerful warlords have been circling. They've divided the capital, each taking a corner as part of their recent territorial gains — Izo, Ti Lapli in the south; Chen Mechan and Jeff Canaan in the north, Lanmo SanJou and Vitel'homme in the east. Members of the powerful Viv Ansanm gang coalition, all have been closing the gap ever since an attack in the once peaceful mountainside of Kenscoff in late January created a security lapse that left key Port-au-Prince neighborhoods unprotected and vulnerable to attack.
With dozens of roads, including many leading to the main international airport, now in gang territory, the encircling of the capital is leaving just one question: How long can Haiti's ill-equipped national police and small military, along with the Kenya-led Multinational Security Support mission, resist the siege before Port-au-Prince or Pétion-Ville collapses?
Compounding the problem, the Trump administration, which has an ongoing ban on U.S. flights landing in the capital, is canceling immigration protections and work permits as of Tuesday for over 200,000 Haitians in the U.S. and asking them to self-deport home.
'The situation is full of uncertainties, but morbid symptoms are everywhere,' said Robert Fatton, a retired Haiti-born professor of political science and longtime watcher of his country's cycle of crises. 'This is a calamity. From abroad it looks like the country is simply falling into the abyss, but I am not sure what Haitians in Haiti will or can do to stop this fall.'
The pivotal moment, several police officers told the Miami Herald, came when police failed to heed the warnings of a pending attack on Kenscoff, and police responded by redeploying five armored vehicles from downtown up the hillside to reinforce the area's rural hamlets. The vehicles had been strategically stationed to prevent the neighborhoods from falling into gang hands. The removal of the vehicles, coupled with the loss of three additional armored vehicles, created the opening that has allowed gangs in recent weeks to launch simultaneous attacks and control access in and out of the metropolitan area.
Now gangs have seized control of the last open road through the mountains to the south, the southeast, Nippes and Grand-Anse, trapping the capital's four million people, and are moving closer to Pétion-Ville.
The gangs' recent expansion into Nazon and Delmas 30, which puts them within striking distance of the headquarters of one of the country's biggest banks, along with Delmas 19, located less than a mile from the government-owned Radio Television Nationale d'Haiti, is also causing alarms. Any further expansion into Delmas, for example, could lead to a closure of the airspace because air traffic controllers and airport employees would no longer be able to safely commute to work.
This is not the first time Port-au-Prince has been on the brink of falling into the hands of Viv Ansanm. But it's the closest it's been.
Last year as gang leaders united under the Viv Ansanm banner and launched simultaneous attacks across the capital in effort to bring down the government, the U.S. and the Caribbean Community intervened. They forced the ouster of the prime minister and helped Haitians put in place a new transition to restore security and pave the way to elections.
A year later, neither has occurred. The transition has been marred by ongoing disagreements, political tensions, infighting and what security experts describe as a lack of a cohesive strategy for fighting the gangs. Today, areas once considered safe two months ago are now empty or blocked by barricades.
Joint operations between the Kenya-led force and police have forced gang members to retreat in some areas. But security analysts are warning that without long-term police presence, gangs may reoccupy vacated areas.
Last month, a government task force began dropping explosive drones in gangs' strongholds. But the attacks haven't neutralized the gangs.
'As armed groups expand their control, government institutions have retreated, leaving critical infrastructure unprotected,' Halo Solutions Firm S.A., said in its most recent weekly report on Haiti's security situation. 'More than 50 official buildings, including ministries, courts, port facilities, schools, and other strategic institutions, have been vacated, signaling a significant decline in state authority over the capital.'
This is most noticeable around the Champ-de-Mars, the public square across from the presidential palace and defense ministry. Last week government offices in the area were told to remove computers and other valuables. Elsewhere, banks and private firms were frantically making calls trying to relocate to houses and hotel rooms in Petion-Ville.
What the fall of the capital would mean
So what would the fall of Port-au-Prince look like? Most experts in and out of Haiti say the embattled nine-member Transitional Presidential Council would no longer be able to function, and the gangs would take over the symbols of power. These include the offices of the country's beleaguered transitional authorities and the National Palace, and Pétion-Ville either on the verge of collapse or invaded by armed groups.
'A clear sign would be the closing of the American embassy and the departure of the presidential council and prime minister,' said Fatton.
The fighting has already temporarily shuttered the doors of the French embassy, and is moving closer to Canada's embassy in Delmas 75. The violence also is but a few miles from the Villa d'Accueil in Musseau, where the offices of the ruling council are located.
The presidential council, already weakened and with its claim to legitimacy dwindling, would certainly lose power in a collapse. Can it become a government in exile if it functions from Cap-Haïtien, the northern port city where the staff of some international institutions have been fleeing?
'What will the U.S. do? It does not look like Washington has a plan. Perhaps negotiations may occur between the presidential council and the gangs to avoid a bloodbath,' Fatton said.
The United States appears to have no current no Haiti policy. The Dominican Republic, Haiti's closest neighbor, has reinforced its land border with its military and recently designated more than a dozen Haitian gangs as 'terrorist organizations.' The move has raised concerns about whether Haiti's neighbor would deploy troops on Haitian soil if there's a takeover of the country by the gangs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anger over starvation in Gaza leaves Israel increasingly isolated
Anger over starvation in Gaza leaves Israel increasingly isolated

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Anger over starvation in Gaza leaves Israel increasingly isolated

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has responded angrily to the growing skepticism. He has said the reports of starvation are exaggerated, that Hamas must be destroyed, that critics are often antisemites, and that Western recognition of a Palestinian state is a reward to Hamas for the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel that killed more than 1,000 people. 'The usual Israeli view is that this crisis is another temporary problem,' said Natan Sachs, an analyst of Israeli politics. 'But that's a misreading of the world, because it's accelerating a global turn against Israel that has dramatic effects, especially among young people.' Advertisement As anger grows over widespread hunger in Gaza, Israel risks becoming an international outcast. The deadly Hamas-led attack on Israel in 2023 remains a vivid, salient event for many Israelis. But for others around the world, the devastation and hunger in Gaza have become more visible and urgent. Children atop rubble awaited aid in Gaza City, on Sunday. SAHER ALGHORRA/NYT Since Israel cut off aid in March to try to force Hamas to give up hostages, Israel's effort to install its own distribution system has been marred by chaos and casualties while hunger has increased. Scores have been killed as Palestinians rushed to get food. Advertisement And no one has a clear idea of how the war will end, even as Israel has retaken large areas of Gaza several times over. The number of dead in the enclave has reached more than 60,000, a majority of them civilians, according to the United Nations. Netanyahu has not outlined what he has in mind for Gaza or who should try to rule it instead of Hamas. He has refused to engage with the countries most likely to help do that—the Persian Gulf states, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia. Trump remains a strong supporter of Israel in its fight against Hamas, and he has in the past given Netanyahu carte blanche in how to do it. But even Trump has seemed shocked by the televised videos of hunger in Gaza, and some of his most fervent supporters are publicly questioning the relationship with Israel. Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff The increasing debate over whether Israel is committing genocide is also reflective of how 'something fundamental has shifted in how Israel is perceived,' said Daniel Levy, a negotiator under former Labor Party-led governments in Israel and current president of the US/Middle East Project, a nonprofit. Advertisement He points to a sharp cultural shift, with anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian, and sometimes antisemitic demonstrations at places including opera houses and music festivals. Pop stars including Billie Eilish and Ariana Grande have made strong appeals for a cease-fire and for the delivery of aid to Palestinians in Gaza. 'For a long time, Israel thought that if we throw antisemitism and the Holocaust at them loudly enough, it will all go away,' Levy said. 'But the zeitgeist is shifting, and the Israeli attempt at outrage works with an ever-smaller cohort.' Opinion polls reflect the change. A Pew poll in April found that American views of Israel had turned more negative. About 53 percent of US adults now express an unfavorable opinion of Israel, up from 42 percent before the Hamas attack. Of those, the share who voice very unfavorable views of Israel went up to 19 percent of adults this year, from 10 percent in 2022. A demonstrator wore a mask depicting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during an anti-government protest in Tel Aviv on Thursday, calling for the end to the war in Gaza. JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images Another Pew poll, conducted last month, found that in 20 of 24 countries surveyed, half or more of adults had an unfavorable view of Israel. Around three-quarters or more hold this view in Australia, Greece, Indonesia, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey. The figures are higher among younger people—and one of the largest gaps between young and old is in the United States. The largest danger to Israel in the future is not the stances taken by European leaders or its most passionate critics, Sachs argued. 'From the Israeli perspective, the most troubling phenomenon is the people on the fence. Either they don't know about the issue or want to stay away from it, because it's toxic,' he said. 'The average person who might normally support Israel would rather stay away.' Advertisement Netanyahu has been too slow to understand the reality of the shift and its cost to his country, said Chuck Freilich, a former deputy national security adviser in Israel. It is difficult to know the full reality in Gaza, because Israel does not allow foreign journalists to enter independently. But aid groups have described mounting malnutrition and cases of starvation. Israel needs diplomatic support, he said. And it desperately needs good economic relations with Europe and the United States, said Bernard Avishai, an Israeli American professor and analyst. 'Israel made a fantastic bet on globalization, and its economic life depends on its technological elites finding partners in developed countries,' Avishai said. 'What happens when companies like that get a cold shoulder from people around the world?' There is built-up anger in the West at having been pushed for years to keep down criticism over Israeli actions such as the occupation of the West Bank, Avishai said, and that anger is now coming out more strongly over Gaza. 'What's happening in Gaza is appalling,' and it diminishes the willingness of people to travel to Israel and to work with its scientists and companies, he said. 'For the Israeli economy,' he noted, 'this is already devastating.' Pushed by public reaction and by his own frustration, President Emmanuel Macron of France has said that his country will recognize Palestine as a state at the United Nations in September. Canada's prime minister, Mark Carney, said Wednesday that his country would do the same. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has made Britain's recognition conditional, but the moves nonetheless reflect how swiftly views of the war—and of Israel—have changed among Western countries. Advertisement This article originally appeared in .

Colorado deputies disciplined for helping federal immigration agents
Colorado deputies disciplined for helping federal immigration agents

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Colorado deputies disciplined for helping federal immigration agents

DENVER (AP) — Two Colorado deputies have been disciplined for violating state law by helping federal agents make immigration arrests, and their sheriff says officers from other agencies have done the same. One of the deputies, Alexander Zwinck, was sued by Colorado's attorney general last week, after his cooperation with federal immigration agents on a drug task force was revealed following the June arrest of a college student from Brazil with an expired visa. Following an internal investigation, a second Mesa County Sheriff's Office deputy and task force member, Erik Olson, was also found to have shared information. The two deputies used a Signal chat to relay information to federal agents, according to documents released Wednesday by the sheriff's office. Zwinck was placed on three weeks of unpaid leave, and Olson was given two weeks of unpaid leave, Mesa County Sheriff Todd Rowell said in a statement. Both were removed from the task force. Two supervisors also were disciplined. One was suspended without pay for two days, and another received a letter of reprimand. A third supervisor received counseling. State laws push back against Trump crackdown The lawsuit and disciplinary actions come as lawmakers in Colorado and other Democratic-led states have crafted legislation intended to push back against President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Since Trump took office, pro-immigrant bills have advanced through legislatures in Illinois, Vermont, California, Connecticut and other states. The measures include stronger protections for immigrants in housing, employment and police encounters. Trump has enlisted hundreds of state and local law enforcement agencies to help identify immigrants in the U.S. illegally and detain them for potential deportation. The Republican also relaxed longtime rules restricting immigration enforcement near schools , churches and hospitals. Zwinck was sued under a new state law signed by Gov. Jared Polis about two weeks before the arrest of the student from Brazil. It bars local government employees including law enforcement from sharing identifying information about people with federal immigration officials. Previously, only state agencies were barred from doing that. It's one of a series of laws limiting the state's involvement in immigration enforcement passed over the years that has drawn criticism and a lawsuit from the federal government. The U.S. Department of Justice has also sued Illinois and New York, as well as several cities in those states and New Jersey , alleging their policies violate the U.S. Constitution or federal immigration laws. Officers say they were following established procedures Zwinck and Olson told officials they thought they were operating according to long-standing procedures. However, the internal investigation found they had both received and read two emails prior to the passage of the new law about previous limits on cooperation with immigration officials. The most recent was sent on Jan. 30, 2025, after an official for Homeland Security Investigations, part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, had asked state and local law enforcement officers at a law enforcement meeting to contact HSI or ICE if they arrested a person for a violent crime who was believed not to be a citizen, the investigation documents said. The email said not to contact HSI or ICE. Zwinck said he didn't know about the new law and was not interested in immigration enforcement. 'When I was out there, I wanted to find drugs, guns and bad guys,' Zwinck said at a July 23 disciplinary hearing. 'And sending that information to HSI they provided the ability to give me real time background information on the person I was in contact with,' he said. Olson, who said he had been with the sheriff's office 18 years, testified at his disciplinary hearing that it was 'standard practice' to send information up to federal agents during traffic stops. 'It was routine for ICE to show up on the back end of a traffic stop to do their thing,' Olson said. 'I truly thought what we were doing was condoned by our supervision and lawful.' A lawyer at a law firm listed as representing both deputies, Michael Lowe, did not immediately return a telephone call or email seeking comment. Rowell said drug task force members from other law enforcement agencies, including the Colorado State Patrol, also shared information with immigration agents on the Signal chat. The state patrol denied the claim. The sheriff faulted Attorney General Phil Weiser for filing the lawsuit against Zwinck before a local internal investigation was complete. He called on the Democrat, who is running for governor, to drop it. 'As it stands, the lawsuit filed by the Attorney General's Office sends a demoralizing message to law enforcement officers across Colorado — that the law may be wielded selectively and publicly for maximum political effect rather than applied fairly and consistently,' he said. Weiser said last week that he was investigating whether other officers in the chat violated the law. Spokesperson Lawrence Pacheco said Weiser was presented with evidence of a 'blatant violation of state law' and had to act. 'The attorney general has a duty to enforce state laws and protect Coloradans and he'll continue to do so,' Pacheco said. ___ Brown reported from Billings, Montana. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

A US judge says arrested Haitian businessman and former presidential hopeful will remain in custody
A US judge says arrested Haitian businessman and former presidential hopeful will remain in custody

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

A US judge says arrested Haitian businessman and former presidential hopeful will remain in custody

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A federal immigration judge in Miami ordered on Thursday that wealthy Haitian businessman and one-time presidential hopeful Pierre Réginald Boulos remain in custody in the United States, where he is held over accusations of supporting violent gangs in Haiti. Boulos was arrested at his home in South Florida earlier in July, accused of being 'engaged in a campaign of violence and gang support that contributed to Haiti's destabilization,' the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has said. A well-known member of Haiti's elite, he is the most high-profile Haitian arrested to date under the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Thursday's hearing at the Krome North Service Processing Center was held behind closed doors, with authorities barring journalists and others from the courtroom and the detention center itself. It wasn't immediately known what occurred at the hearing other than the judge denying Boulos be released, a person familiar with the case told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the hearing. More than a dozen people gathered outside the detention center on Thursday, demanding that Boulos remain in the U.S. — or anywhere else but Haiti. The demonstrators waved at cars that passed by and honked in support. 'If Boulos goes to Haiti, he will not stay in prison. The justice in Haiti are gangs,' read one sign. Some said Boulos should be sent to El Salvador, or even Guantánamo. Another sign read: Send Boulos under the sea. U.S. authorities have not provided any details on Boulos's case, and no documents have been made public. Days after his arrest, ICE also said Boulos failed to disclose in his residency application his involvement in the creation of a political party or that Haiti's government had referred him for prosecution for misusing loans. It added that the State Department 'has determined that certain individuals with U.S. lawful permanent resident status have supported and collaborated with Haitian gang leaders connected to Viv Ansanm, a Haitian foreign terrorist organization.' 'The United States will not allow individuals to enjoy the benefits of legal status in our country while they are facilitating the actions of violent organizations or supporting criminal terrorist organizations abroad,' the statement said. Boulos ran grocery stores, car dealerships and other businesses while in Haiti, where he served as president of the National Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Boulos, who was born in the U.S., has previously denied a flurry of corruption allegations in Haiti. In 2019, he created the Third Way Movement, a political party that he said at the time served as a contrast to the 'shameless elite and the unscrupulous politicians who are working to bog down the country and increase the suffering of the people' of Haiti. Boulos renounced his U.S. citizenship amid expectations of a presidential run, which never materialized. He obtained U.S residency last year, under the Biden administration. Dánica Coto, The Associated Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store