December 5, 2025

Martissant, Four Years Under Gang Occupation: CARDH Denounces a Capital Surrendered to Criminal Control

June 8, 2025

June 1, 2025, marks the fourth anniversary of Martissant’s occupation by armed gangs—an ongoing crisis denounced by the Center for Analysis and Research in Human Rights (CARDH). In its latest report, CARDH highlights that since 2021, 28 territories have been lost to gang control, including 25 in the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area.

Gang violence has reached alarming levels, with over 5,600 violent deaths recorded in 2024, according to United Nations data. Criminal groups now control approximately 85% of the capital, making daily life increasingly perilous for ordinary citizens.

In response to this deepening crisis, CARDH has voiced support for the use of the private security firm ACADEMI, formerly known as Blackwater, while stressing the need for strict rules of engagement and coordinated air, sea, and ground support for national security forces and the Ministry of Public Health and Population. This proposal aims to bolster local capacities in the fight against gang domination.

Despite the deployment of a Kenya-led multinational mission, security restoration efforts remain insufficient, with only 800 officers deployed out of the 2,500 initially planned. Meanwhile, the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate, with more than one million people displaced and growing food insecurity—underscoring the urgent need for a coordinated international response to restore order and stability in Haiti.

Related articles

Society

Under the Banner of Unity, the Architects of the Failed CPT Prepare Their Strategic Return

December 1, 2025
Society

Subsidized With $11 Million by the State, Sunrise Shuts Down and Embarrasses the Executive

December 1, 2025
Executive, Society

Ruelle Vaillant: A Tribute Under the Shadow of an Insecurity Worse Than 1987

December 1, 2025

Sign up to our newsletter

Haiti Chronicle is an online newspaper that provides factual and in-depth reporting on Haiti’s government and society. We cover the decisions of the executive, the legislative and the judicial, and its impact on Haitian society
Copyrights © 2025 Haiti Chronicle