Haiti on brink of ‘no return’ says UN official

A burnt out car during a protest against crime in Port-au-Prince Haiti on April 16 2025. Photo: Clarens Siffroy AFP

Haiti is approaching a “point of no return” as it struggles to respond to escalating gang violence, the top United Nations (UN) official in the country has said.

According to a report from msn.com, Maria Isabel Salvador, the UN special representative to the Caribbean nation, delivered the warning to the UN Security Council on Monday.

“As gang violence continues to spread to new areas of the country, Haitians experience growing levels of vulnerability and increasing scepticism about the ability of the state to respond to their needs,” Salvador said.

“Haiti could face total chaos,” she said, adding that aid and support for the international force deployed to stem rampant gang violence was desperately needed to avoid that fate.

“I urge you to remain engaged and answer the urgent needs of the country and its people,” she said.

The report further stated that the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, Haiti faces severe political instability, with swaths of the country under the control of rival armed gangs who carry out widespread murders, rapes and kidnappings.

Salvador cited cholera outbreaks and gender-based violence alongside a deteriorating security situation.

Most recently, Salvador said, gangs seized the city of Mirebalais in central Haiti, freeing more than 500 prisoners during the assault. It was the fifth prison break in under a year and “part of a deliberate effort to entrench dominance, dismantle institutions and instil fear”, she said.

“Armed gangs have also been increasingly battling for control of the capital, Port-au-Prince, with violence intensifying as rival gangs attempt to establish new territories,” she said.

Meanwhile, a Kenyan-led force authorised by the UN has failed to push back the gangs since the deployment began in June of last year. The mission has about 1,000 police officers from six countries, short of the 2,500 originally planned.

The report went on to state that Kenya’s national security adviser, Monica Juma, told the council in a video briefing from Nairobi that the force has entered “a decisive phase of its operation” where gangs are coordinating operations and attacking people and strategic installations, and targeting the political establishment.

While the Haitian police and the multinational force have launched intensive anti-gang operations and achieved some notable progress, especially in securing critical infrastructure, she said a significant gap exists.

It said additionally, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has also warned that further international support was “required immediately to allow the national police to prevent the capital slipping closer to the brink”, according to an unpublished report seen by the AFP news agency.

The report detailed the surge in violence, with the UN recording 2,660 homicides in the three months since December 2024 – a 41.3 percent increase over the previous quarter.

But the report also pointed to a high civilian toll in efforts to counter the gangs.

During the period, anti-gang operations resulted in 702 people killed, with 21 percent estimated to be innocent civilians, the report said.

There was also an alarming increase in gender-based violence, with 347 incidents reported in the five months to February 2025, according to the UN data.

Collective rape was the most common violation, accounting for 61 percent of cases.

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9 Comments

  1. Long-term Results
    April 23, 2025

    There are only a few gangs in Haiti protecting and defending the elite. This is a precursor to another invasion to avoid the same reparations they still pay to the Khazarians that makes them a super power today, also England, France, Japan & Korea.

  2. April 23, 2025

    Will Caribbean leaders allow Haiti to become another Grenada because of ‬the failed doctrine of
    ‪“ Non-Interference”?‬
    ‪In the 80’s it took Dominica’s Eugenia Charles and the US intervention in Grenada to save the region.
    See chapters 1 and 15 of my book on Amazon:

    [Standing up to Bully Politicians]

    Looks like we need another Eugenia to save the region. If Haiti goes, who’s next?

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 7 Thumb down 1
    • Putin
      April 23, 2025

      Vans, you keep repeating this foolishness about Eugenia saving Dominica and all that ish. You will be hard-pressed to find anyone today who still believes this crap, you know. Not even Bosso still believes this myth. So, wake from your slumber and live in 2025, not 1980. Any attempts to live in the 1980s only leave you high on nostalgia and, consequently, unable to see straight in 2025.

      • Ibo France
        April 23, 2025

        I agree! Eugenia Charles aged nothing nor anyone. That’s supreme asininity.

    • Hmmmmmmmm
      April 23, 2025

      The Caribbean keaders are too busy stealing the peoples money, and storing it in far away places.
      Maybe the Manicou Gang should be sent to Haiti. That’s where the cowards need to go.

      Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 4 Thumb down 0
  3. Brian Paul
    April 22, 2025

    Haiti we sorry.

  4. Vwais den
    April 22, 2025

    where are the gangs getting the guns from? who is supplying them with weapons? find out the supplier, and find out the root of the problem

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 7 Thumb down 1
    • Comedong
      April 23, 2025

      @Vwais So who’s supplying the gangs in Dominica with guns, and where are they getting all these guns from? Is anyone concerned about that? Charity starts at home.

  5. L C Matthew
    April 22, 2025

    On the brink you say!! I think the UN might as well recognize barbecue as the president get France to pay back for the slave labour and all the money Hati paid post independence, get the gangs to formalize into the police and army using part of France reparations to pay them along with UN funds and use the money fix the place. let us calculate yield frome slavery and beyond, factor in inflation and do a present value calculation. France can get a payment plan for next 400 years with a modest interest of 7%. Then the US can cheap in for thier past abuse and occupation. That will help get them out of the abyss.

    Hot debate. What do you think? Thumb up 5 Thumb down 5

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