Thu | Apr 25, 2024

Human rights group says vigilante group having an effect on violence in Haiti

Published:Tuesday | May 30, 2023 | 8:59 AM
CARDH said the vigilante groups are mainly made up of young people including some children, and likely emerged from the extreme cruelty inflicted by gangs, the ineffectiveness of the government, police and army and lack of international action. - CMC photo

PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti, CMC – A local human rights groups says violence by armed gangs in the French-speaking CARICOM country has declined significantly following the emergence of a vigilante group, known as Bwa Kale, in April.

The Centre d'analyse et de recherche en droits de l'homme (CARDH) in a report said that the vigilante group, linked to at least 160 killings in April, began after residents in  Port-au-Prince lynched and set fire to more than a dozen suspected gang members on April 24.

It said the activities of Bwa Kale  have resulted in no kidnappings taking place from April 24 to May 24, while 43 gang-linked slayings occurred during the same period. CARDH said 146 gang murders were recorded between April 1 and April 23.

“Without making a value judgement, the 'Bwa Kale' movement has in just one month produced convincing, visible results; fear has changed sides. Both kidnappings and gang-related killings have fallen drastically,” CARDH added in the report.

CARDH said the vigilante groups are mainly made up of young people including some children, and likely emerged from the extreme cruelty inflicted by gangs, the ineffectiveness of the government, police and army and lack of international action.

Last week, CARICOM leaders appointed three former prime ministers as members of an Eminent Persons Group (EPG) as the regional integration grouping  seeks to extend its Good Offices to the government of Haiti and other Haitian stakeholders.

At their summit in the Bahamas in February, the regional leaders reiterated that CARICOM  must play a leadership role in addressing the deteriorating situation in Haiti, “towards which there are moral and political obligations”..”

Earlier this month, United Nations Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, described Haiti as a “tragic situation” and appealed to the international community to do more to help the French-speaking CARICOM country overcome its present political and socio-economic conditions.

Guterres said that Haiti faces dramatic humanitarian needs, a political system that is paralysed and levels of violence by gangs “that are absolutely appalling.

The UN Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH) said in the month of April alone, more than 600 people were killed in violence in the country's capital. This follows the killing of at least 846 people in the first three months of 2023.

BINUH said that overall, the number of victims of killings, injuries and kidnappings increased by 28 per cent in the first quarter of the year, with a total of 1,634 cases reported.

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