Foreign.
Speaker B2025.
Speaker B2 Mine resistant ambush protected vehicles were traveling along the road in Savien, near Pont Sonde, a small town in the Artbonite region a couple of hours north of the capital, Port au Prince.
Speaker BThe officers inside were part of the Kenyan led multinational security support mission, the mss, and they'd been sent to recover a Haitian National Police armored vehicle that.
Speaker CWas stuck in a ditch, a ditch.
Speaker BThat was thought to have been dug by a gang.
Speaker BThe task seemed simple, but they quickly ran into trouble.
Speaker BOne of their vehicles got stuck and the other suffered a mechanical problem.
Speaker BAs the officers attempted to resolve the issue, members of the Grand Gryff Gang attacked.
Speaker BDuring the firefight, all three armored vehicles were set on fire and destroyed.
Speaker BThe MSS and Haitian National Police withdrew, but they were missing one MSS officer.
Speaker BHis name was Benedict Cabiru, and there was confusion about what had happened to him because when the officers returned to the scene of the attack, there was no body, so they didn't know whether he was alive or not.
Speaker BBut an unsettling video emerged online sometime later and it showed a body of a man, allegedly that of Kabiru.
Speaker BAnd you can hear the gang members boasting about killing the MSS officer.
Speaker BBut confusion remained.
Speaker BThe Transitional Presidential Council in Haiti said that a Kenyan officer had been killed, but the Kenyan authorities only confirmed that he was missing as a contingent.
Speaker DAs a commander, one of the first things is that you have to account all the officers who are in the operation.
Speaker DSo as we speak right now, we are still establishing where the officer is.
Speaker DHe is still missing in action, leaving.
Speaker BKabiru's family back in Kenya with the crippling uncertainty surrounding his fate.
Speaker DAgony, frustration and fear.
Speaker DThese are some of the descriptions that the situation has uncomfortably been having a seat at the home of the family of Benedict Kabiru, the Kenyan policeman who remains missing after guns in Haiti took him away.
Speaker DThe family says the government has deserted them, keeping them in the dark as they battle the agonizing uncertainty of their kin's fate.
Speaker BDespite the reports in Haiti of his death and the videos circulating online, the Kenyan authorities have yet to confirm it.
Speaker BOther reports have said that there are negotiations underway with Vivonsom, who are believed to be holding the body, asking to release it.
Speaker BBack to the mss.
Speaker BWelcome to Deep Dive from the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organised Crime.
Speaker BI'm Jack Meaghan Vickers, and this is Living Together, the Gangs of Haiti Part 3.
Speaker CWake up.
Speaker BThe bandits are coming Foreign so let me just give you a brief reminder.
Speaker BBack in part one, we talked about the aftermath of the assassination of President Moise in July 2021, then the earthquake that followed shortly after, and the increasing aggression from the armed gangs, Causing chaos on the streets by blocking fuel terminals and so on, with the express wish to oust the new leader of Haiti, Ariel henry.
Speaker BNow, when he came to power, Henry had promised new elections as soon as possible.
Speaker BBut those plans were consistently postponed and then quietly shelved after the dissolution of the provisional electoral council.
Speaker BThe following year saw increased kidnappings as well as increased gang violence.
Speaker BIt was during this time that the rivalry between the two gang coalitions, G9 and GPEP, was really in full swing.
Speaker CIn the area of brooklyn.
Speaker CIn citi soleil, an area controlled by GPEP, members of G9 invaded the neighborhood.
Speaker CSo many were killed in the violence that bodies were said to litter the streets.
Speaker COnce a person was killed, Their body was left to decompose on the side of the road.
Speaker CAccording to the UN, over 200 people were killed in just 10 days.
Speaker CIn July 2022, 3,000 were forced to flee, and the gangs destroyed and burnt many homes.
Speaker CAnd then, to compound the issue, in mid September, prime minister Ariel Henry announced that there would be a gradual increase in fuel prices in an attempt to save over $400 million a year in fuel subsidies, Money which could be redirected into social programs.
Speaker DViolent protests broke out after the government announced a rise in fuel prices.
Speaker DThe prime minister is urging calm, but calls are growing for him to resign.
Speaker DMany businesses and homes have been damaged as the demonstrations continue.
Speaker DSome embassies have also been forced to close immediately.
Speaker CViolent protests erupted, with roads being blocked, and G9 launched its second blockade of the varro fuel terminal, Once again demanding the resignation of Ariel Henry.
Speaker CThe country ground to a halt.
Speaker CGas stations closed.
Speaker CSchools delayed the beginning of the academic year.
Speaker CHospitals were forced to massively reduce services because they couldn't get the fuel for their generators.
Speaker CWater delivery companies had to close, and cholera made a return.
Speaker CThose that could afford it resorted to buying fuel on the black market, which cost at least 10 times the usual price.
Speaker CAnd so, with the growing crisis in October 2022, the Haitian government authorized Ariel Henry to request foreign military support to combat the growing power of the gangs.
Speaker BHere's Sophie rutenbach, A visiting scholar at the New York university center on international cooperation.
Speaker EAriel Henry first requested the deployment of an international intervention to support the Haitian national police in September 2022, when there were significant protests against some measures he'd taken.
Speaker EAnd the gangs took advantage of that opportunity to essentially blockade the port where most if not all of Haiti's oil and gas products are brought in and distributed.
Speaker ESo essentially you had for close to three months in fall 2022, a situation where there was almost no oil and gas in the country and things were at a standstill, no cars moving on the streets.
Speaker EThe situation was bad enough that the lack of the ability to purify water is connected to the re emergence of cholera in October 2022.
Speaker ESo terrible situation.
Speaker EAriel Henri requests international intervention to help him sort of reestablish control.
Speaker EThere's a long process of sort of trying to figure out what this might look like.
Speaker EThere's little desire to do a UN peacekeeping mission given the long history of peacekeeping in Haiti.
Speaker ESo they look for sort of some support that could be kind of an ad hoc multinational force.
Speaker EBut no one is willing to really step up and take the lead.
Speaker ESo they approached a few different countries, Canada and Brazil among them.
Speaker ENo real appetite to kind of step into a pretty dangerous situation with really difficult objectives to try and achieve.
Speaker CHaiti was left in limbo.
Speaker CInternational support was not forthcoming, that is until June, July, the following year, when the government of Kenya stepped forward.
Speaker EKenya, to the surprise of the United States, was willing.
Speaker EThere are a number of reasons behind that.
Speaker EDomestic political considerations, individual personalities and shifting geopolitics.
Speaker EIt's not the most natural first country that comes to your mind when you think of a country to sort of fly halfway across the world and lead an intervention in the Caribbean.
Speaker EBut they stepped forward in July 2023.
Speaker EThere were some further hiccups from there.
Speaker ESo the UN Security Council authorized the mission in October 2023.
Speaker CThe mission was to be called the Multinational Security Support Mission, or mss.
Speaker CBut getting this Kenya led mission up and running was a challenge as the Kenyan government had some legal challenges to contend with.
Speaker CNamely, the High Court of Kenya temporarily blocked the deployment with a ruling judge describing it as lacking constitutional and legal foundation.
Speaker CAnd it was shortly after this that we return to the very start of this episode.
Speaker CAnd that's the birth of Vivonson on 29 February 2024.
Speaker CIt was probably the worst possible development for the reeling Haitian state as G9 and their arch rivals GPEP, buried the hatchet to form this new gang coalition.
Speaker CThese two powerful gangs, as known brands, they operated a sort of franchise system to entice smaller and newer gangs into their coalition, spreading their influence further.
Speaker CNow they'd combined to create a super gang, for want of a better phrase.
Speaker CAt the announcement of Vivonson, barbecue pronounced their aims again the removal of Ariel Henry.
Speaker CBut Also other government ministers.
Speaker CHe finished with this statement.
Speaker CWe, the armed men, have decided to take the future into our own hands.
Speaker BHere's Widlaw Merencourt, editor in chief at the Aebo Post.
Speaker FWe want some is coalition of some of the biggest gangs in Haiti.
Speaker FThe reporting shows that the coalition is allegedly linked to drug trafficking and they control a huge swath of border prints.
Speaker FThey have as a spokesperson Jimmy Cherizier, who is a former police officer implicated in multiple massacres and the public claims of Ivan Sahm is to conduct what they call the revolution against the corrupt politicians and corrupt business leaders of the country.
Speaker FHowever, since the inception and the resurrection of of Vivant Somme sometimes last year, but especially back at the end of February and March 2024 when they attacked multiple institutions in Port au Prince.
Speaker FThey opened the two biggest prisons of the country in Port au Prince, one in Kwasibuquet and the other one in Port au Prince, releasing some of the most dangerous inmates in the streets, destroying hospitals and shutting down schools and businesses.
Speaker FTheir goal is to conduct a revolution for the poor in the country.
Speaker FBut those suffering from the violence, those leaving the houses, more than a million people, those suffering from food insecurity, more than half of the country, those are the ones suffering today with the actions of village.
Speaker CRemember that Ariel Henry was out of the country first at an international summit of the Caribbean Community and Common Market Caricom before heading straight to Kenya to sign a reciprocal security agreement with his counterpart in Nairobi on 29th February, the same day as the announcement of Vivonson.
Speaker CVivonson immediately went on the offensive.
Speaker CAs Whidlo just said, the jailbreak in early March 2024 again highlights the strategic thinking of Vivonson.
Speaker CTo distract authorities, gangs launched a coordinated attack on multiple police stations.
Speaker CWhile attention was diverted, the gangs led another assault, this time on two prisons, one in Port au Prince and the other in Croix de Bouquet, on the edge of the capital.
Speaker CTwelve people were killed in the attacks and of the 4,000 prisoners kept at the jails, around 3,700 inmates escaped down to Haiti, where the government has declared a state of emergency.
Speaker DAs violence escalates, armed gangs demanding the.
Speaker CPrime Minister's resignation have attacked two prisons, allowing thousands of inmates to escape and.
Speaker DLeaving dozens dead and wounded.
Speaker CIronically, some of those who chose to stay were the Colombian hitmen involved in the assassination of President Moise.
Speaker CThe government declared a 72 hour state of emergency and a curfew.
Speaker CThis curfew, unsurprisingly, was completely ignored by the gangs.
Speaker CViolence escalated, including an attack on on the international airport.
Speaker CThese attacks were actually repelled by security forces, but it did force the airport to ground all flights.
Speaker CSo why attack the airport?
Speaker CWell, the gangs were trying to prevent Ariel Henry from returning to the country.
Speaker CAnd it worked.
Speaker CUnable to land in Haiti, his plane asked for permission to land in neighboring Dominican Republic.
Speaker CThis was denied, and he was forced to instead land in Puerto Rico.
Speaker CThe writing was on the wall for Ariel Henry.
Speaker CWhat little international support he had drained away.
Speaker COn 24 April 2024, Ariel Henry's embattled reign came to an end.
Speaker CHe resigned.
Speaker CHe still hasn't returned to Haiti.
Speaker DThe prime minister of Haiti, Ariel Henry, has agreed to resign and make way for a transitional authority as his country wrestles with growing anarchy.
Speaker DHe's been stuck in Puerto Rico, unable to return.
Speaker DUS officials say he's welcome to remain on US soil if he wishes.
Speaker DMr.
Speaker DHenry has held the unelected role since the assassination in 2021 of the country's last president.
Speaker DArmed groups have been calling for Mr.
Speaker DHenry to step down, leading to widespread violence.
Speaker CThe gangs did not have everything their own way.
Speaker CIn mid March, one of the prisoners that had escaped in the mass jailbreak was a gang leader known as T Greg.
Speaker CHe was part of the Viv an somme alliance.
Speaker CAs the leader of the Delmas 95 gang, he was killed in a shootout with Haitian police in the capital.
Speaker CThis came just a day after another gang leader known as McCandal, alongside another suspected gang member, was caught by an alleged Brokeli vigilante group and they were set on fire.
Speaker COne of the bodies was reported to have had its hands cut off.
Speaker CAfter Ariel Henry's resignation, a new nine person transitional council was put in place.
Speaker CJob d'un vivant.
Speaker CThey had achieved their overarching mission, the removal of Ariel Henry.
Speaker CTime to lay down your arms and let Haiti rebuild.
Speaker CWell, barbecue.
Speaker CNot one to shy away from the spotlight, turned to social media and said, whether or not you're installed, this message is for you.
Speaker CBrace yourselves.
Speaker CSo let's turn to the Haitian National Police because it will give us a better understanding of what the MSS was about to walk into.
Speaker CThe gangs have been actively targeting officers since 2021.
Speaker CWell over 100 officers have been killed with many more injured.
Speaker CThey've attacked police stations and posts.
Speaker CAnd in that same year, over 400 police facilities were non operational due to gang attacks.
Speaker CAttempts to rebuild these facilities has also been hamstrung by ongoing assaults.
Speaker CWhen Vivonson was announced and immediately went on the offensive, breaking inmates out of two prisons and attacking the Airport.
Speaker CRemember that the diversion that helped the gangs achieve that was attacking police stations.
Speaker CThey managed to seize two police stations in the very center of Port au Prince.
Speaker CA spokesman for the Haitian National Police said that the city center was at war and the police were overwhelmed by the gangs.
Speaker CThese attacks led to four officers being killed.
Speaker CThe Haitian National Police lacked numbers, equipment and safe transport.
Speaker CAnd then, of course, corruption.
Speaker CNow, it's important to say that not all officers are corrupt, but there is undoubtedly some connections between some officers and the gangs.
Speaker COne who spoke to the GI said that it was obvious that this was the case because often details of law enforcement operations were leaked to the gangs ahead of time.
Speaker CAnd obviously this massively reduces trust between colleagues.
Speaker CAnd when you are talking about something that could literally mean life and death, such as confidential operational details, the damage to morale must be absolute.
Speaker CThis frequent violence against police has led many to resign their positions or just abandon their posts.
Speaker CWe heard earlier how some officers who were trying to do their job, arresting someone, only to be forced to release them and then essentially threatened and driven out of the country.
Speaker CThey had no support from the state.
Speaker CAccording to contacts within the police that spoke to the GI, over 900 officers fled Haiti in 2023.
Speaker CAll of this makes recruitment particularly difficult.
Speaker CHere's Sophie.
Speaker EPeople have been absent from post, People have been leaving the country, and the H and P has not been able to sort of keep up recruitment to fill in those slots for people who've left.
Speaker EAnd even worse, for quite a while, the area around the police academy in Port au Prince was controlled by gangs.
Speaker ESo you couldn't even safely conduct basic training courses for police officers.
Speaker ESo there were a couple of years when you had none or maybe one police academy class that was graduated.
Speaker EAnd you know, you're really at that point not achieving replacement, much less growing the police force.
Speaker ESo there are some improvements in that.
Speaker EThe MSS has set up a contingent, I think, in that area around the police academy.
Speaker EThey're working to try and kind of make it safer.
Speaker EThey have graduated a couple of classes recently.
Speaker EThe courses for those classes were shortened given the sort of exigency of the situation, which then raises other concerns about having police officers in the street with insufficient training.
Speaker EBut they are trying to increase the size of the police force, and that's definitely an area where a lot more needs to be done.
Speaker EWe all want Haitians to be responsible for the security of Haitians.
Speaker EAnd the only way to do that is if you have a well trained, responsible, well equipped and effective security forces that are able to kind of take on that security role.
Speaker CWhile saying all this, the Haitian national police have tried to fight back against the gangs.
Speaker CFor example, in november last year, vivonson launched an attack on the neighborhood of salino, an area of port au prince they didn't yet control.
Speaker CAs the attack took place, residents called local radio stations, pleading for help.
Speaker COne 18 year old was struck and killed by a stray bullet while sitting in her home watching a movie.
Speaker CVivonson members set about burning homes and chanting, if you're not with Vivonson, we're going to burn you to ashes.
Speaker CThose who fled ran through the neighborhood next to celino shouting, wake up, wake up, wake up.
Speaker CThe bandits are coming.
Speaker CAnd the citizens listened and began blocking the roads towards salino.
Speaker EThe sounds of war ring out.
Speaker EIn a residential neighborhood in Haiti's capital, residents joined plainclothes police trying to fight off an attack from a gang hoping to extend its territory to salino.
Speaker ESince Sunday, armed men have repeatedly attacked it.
Speaker EAmid a fresh offensive on Thursday, the worst so far, residents fled their homes or were forced out.
Speaker CIn response, acting prime minister garrick o'neill ordered the recall of several hundred police officers and elite soldiers who had been tasked with protecting high ranking officials.
Speaker CThey were going to be redeployed to salino.
Speaker COver the course of the day, police managed to hold off the vivonson attack and at least according to their statements, pushed the gangs back.
Speaker CBut there were rumblings around this whole thing with citizens claiming that police colluded with the gangs before the attack took place place.
Speaker CAnd then the general fear was how long will the police be able to hold back Vivonson?
Speaker CAnd the answer was about a month.
Speaker CSolino is now under gang control.
Speaker CAnd here lies the problem for the Haitian national police.
Speaker CEven if they manage to take territory, they have an inability to hold it.
Speaker CAnd that means the gangs can just wait it out.
Speaker CAnd when the police withdraw, the gangs return.
Speaker BHere's Jacqueline charles from the miami herald.
Speaker GAnd I'm thinking about in particular 2019, which was the last time that you had the police who were able to go in as security forces, and they went into that community and they were there for several weeks before they left and lost complete control of that community.
Speaker GBecause while they were in there, the police were in there.
Speaker GYou needed for social services to come in there.
Speaker GYou needed for the department of education to come in there.
Speaker GYou needed for this whole government apparatus to come and to give people the sense that the government was present and that aid was present and that there was a path forward and so that they can be re empowered themselves.
Speaker GSo that the next time, if a group comes in and try to take over, they have the desire to fight back, right?
Speaker GNot because we formed this vigilante group, but because we have something that we.
Speaker CCan protect in the meantime.
Speaker CThe MSS, led by Kenya, arrived on June 25, 2024, almost two years after Ariel Henry's request for international help.
Speaker DA couple hundred police officers from Kenya landed in Haiti's capital, Port au Ponce, whose main international airport reopened in late May after gang violence forced it to close for nearly 3, 3 months.
Speaker DThey are the first batch of 1000 troops that Kenya expects to deploy to the Caribbean country.
Speaker CThe initial contingent was 200 Kenyan officers hoping to aid in regaining some semblance of control over the country, working alongside the Haitian National Police.
Speaker COther countries have also pledged support in various forms, like El Salvador, Guatemala, Jamaica and others.
Speaker CThe original plan for the MSS was that a full deployment would include 2,500 personnel, provisional operational support for planning and conducting joint security operations to counter the gangs.
Speaker CThis included the security of critical infrastructure such as airports, ports, schools and hospitals.
Speaker CThe mission was for an initial 12 months with a review at 9.
Speaker CRemember that this is not a UN mission, so it doesn't have access to the financial and logistical mechanisms that would come along with that.
Speaker CInstead, it was a resolution adopted by the United Nations Security Security Council.
Speaker CBut for Haitians on the ground, would you even differentiate between the two?
Speaker CHere's Sophie.
Speaker ESo, no, I don't think that people necessarily see the MSS as totally separate from the un.
Speaker EThey certainly at least see the connections.
Speaker EIt may not be, you know, a full UN peacekeeping force.
Speaker EThese police officers are not driving around in UN branded armored personnel carriers.
Speaker EBut that connection is there.
Speaker EI think most of all, what people see is a force that has come a very long way and been deployed on their soil at great expense and that they don't see as making a measurable and clear difference in their lives and in their security.
Speaker ESo I think to a point, it's not even sort of whether or not they think about it as a UN mission or not.
Speaker EThey don't think about it as an effective measure for making their lives better, which is really concerning.
Speaker CThere have been some offensive operations against the gangs.
Speaker CFor example, in October 2024, Haitian and Kenyan police entered the gang control area of Torceli in Port au Prince.
Speaker CDuring the raid and the firefight that ensued, at least 20 gang members were killed.
Speaker CAnd the second in command of the Krasay Bahe gang, a man known as Des Ormes, was shot and injured in November, another joint operation targeted Barbecue himself.
Speaker CThey entered the lower Delmas area of the capital, and during the clashes, again, a number of gang members were killed.
Speaker CBut drone footage caught the moment the Barbecue fled.
Speaker CThe home he was using was destroyed in the operation.
Speaker COf course, Barbecue took to social media to claim victory.
Speaker CBut that being said, we've talked about previous international engagements in Haiti and that they've been largely ineffective, sometimes even leaving the country in a worse state.
Speaker CAnd unfortunately, despite the best efforts of the Kenyan led force, it has so far been largely ineffective at combating the gangs.
Speaker CHere's Whitlaw.
Speaker FIncreasingly, the Kenyans are being perceived as quote, unquote, tourists in Haiti.
Speaker FRight.
Speaker FThey came to the country last June, and the force in itself was supposed to be 2500.
Speaker FOver the next months, new contingents arrived, but they are still not the 2500s.
Speaker FThat's the first thing.
Speaker FThe second thing is if you talk to the members of the force, they will appear confident, but at the same time, they will stress they are doing everything they can with the equipment and the resources that they have.
Speaker FOne of the biggest issues of this force is the fact that they are not well equipped for the kind of fights and battles they have to conduct.
Speaker FIn Haiti, for instance, they need helicopters, air cover to attack the gangs.
Speaker FThey don't have that right.
Speaker FThey need specialized drones and all sorts of equipments that will help them infiltrate the houses and fight effectively.
Speaker FThe gang members hiding there, what they have is, you know, armored cores, and most of them do not leave their armored corps.
Speaker FAnd you cannot effectively fight against extremely mobile gang members who are hidden between houses.
Speaker FAnd when you have an armored car that cannot penetrate these spaces.
Speaker CAnd so we see some of the same problems that have hindered the Haitian National Police.
Speaker CTheir lack of manpower, lack of financing, lack of trust between parties, and a lack of appropriate equipment.
Speaker CNow, we shouldn't blame the individuals for this.
Speaker CThey are still doing what they can, and it's obviously a really dangerous job.
Speaker CIndeed, a couple of Kenyan officers have been killed in battles against the gangs.
Speaker FA community mourns as officer Samuel Tompoye is gaining, given final honors, and laid to rest.
Speaker FHe was killed while on patrol in.
Speaker DHaiti, sent there by the Kenyan government.
Speaker FTo help keep the peace.
Speaker DHe lives behind a wife and two children.
Speaker DNaomi Tompoe says she doesn't know how.
Speaker FShe'Ll manage without his support.
Speaker CAnd this actually is an important point.
Speaker CThe lack of necessary equipment was brought up by MSS officers themselves.
Speaker CThey had real concerns that if they got injured during an engagement with the gangs, that they'd need a way to be safely evacuated for medical treatment.
Speaker CHere's Sophie.
Speaker ESo one of the important shifts in the last two months that I mentioned is the deployment of a Salvadoran helicopter contingent.
Speaker ESo they have provided assets.
Speaker EThose assets are mostly intended to be able to casavac casualty evacuate members of the MSS who are injured in exchanges of fire with gangs.
Speaker EBut that was a real concern for many members of the mss, that why should we risk our lives, you know, if we're injured, if we're not able to be taken care of?
Speaker ESo that is, I think, an important response to concerns expressed by officers in the mss.
Speaker EThat's a very, very new development.
Speaker ESo how that will work is unclear.
Speaker EIt's also those helicopters are.
Speaker EI think there's three of them.
Speaker EI think they're mostly intended for medevac and Kazavak, as opposed to actual air operations.
Speaker EThere is some drone capacity with the Haitian National Police, but it is limited.
Speaker EI think the other thing to flag is maritime capacity.
Speaker ESo at least one of the gangs has a number of boats, maybe not an armada, but certainly a fleet much larger than the Haitian Coast Guard.
Speaker EAnd so the gangs are able to kind of avoid any interference on the roads because they're able to move around by sea and sort of project force by sea.
Speaker CThat's right.
Speaker CThe gangs also appear to have their own version of a navy.
Speaker CThey're attacking small boats carrying Haitians along the coast.
Speaker CWhidlo's Aebo Post did a story on this in 2022 and reported how the use of water to transport goods was a good way to avoid checkpoints that litter the roads on the gang controlled land.
Speaker CBut the gangs noticed this too, and so began patrolling the coastline and boarding boats and stealing everything.
Speaker CThey told of this one story of the Mezzi manman, a small boat that ran up and down the coast west from Port au Prince, transporting things like passengers, seafood, rice, and fuel.
Speaker CThey were followed by a small motorboat, and when it got closer, they saw that heavily armed masked men were on board.
Speaker CThey ordered the Mezzi manman to stop or they would shoot.
Speaker CThey proceeded to board the Mezzi, searching the passengers, taking money, cell phones, suitcases, and even the two engines on board.
Speaker CThe owner of the boat is now indebted to the people whose cargo was not delivered.
Speaker CAnd it's not just small boats that have been affected.
Speaker CLike the aircraft attempting to land at the airport, gangs have fired weapons at container ships in an attempt to block them from loading and unloading containers.
Speaker CIndeed, one shipping company told Reuters that two of its crew had been kidnapped.
Speaker CThe attacks from Vivonson caused land access to the main port in Port au Prince to be closed in September 2024 after they shot at a crane operator attempting to unload a ship.
Speaker CHe had to go to hospital and the ship left without unloading.
Speaker CThe port remained closed for a number of weeks.
Speaker CAnd one thing to understand about the mss, their mandate includes providing support for the provision of security for critical infrastructure and transport locations.
Speaker CThis obviously includes the ports themselves, but they obviously don't have the capacity or equipment to operate at sea.
Speaker CThat falls to the small Haitian coast guard, which in a report to the UN Security Council, they were described as being understaffed and under equipped.
Speaker CSo let's briefly look at the funding of the mss, because it's helpful to understand the difference between say, a UN peacekeeping mission and the mss.
Speaker CA peacekeeping mission means that there is a central fund from the UN which member states contribute to.
Speaker CBut the MSS is not a UN peacekeeping mission and instead is funded through a trust fund which interested countries can contribute.
Speaker CIn this case, the mission needed an estimated $600 million for a year of operation, but so far this figure has not been reached.
Speaker CAlthough the US and Canada have made significant contributions, the majority of US funding has been delivered separate to the fund set up by the un.
Speaker CThe Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, at a joint press conference in the Dominican Republic recently stated that they will continue to support the current mission.
Speaker BBut towards the end of April this year, Dorothy Shea, the interim charge d'affaires at the US mission at the un, said that America cannot continue shouldering such a significant financial burden and called for.
Speaker COthers to step up support.
Speaker BThe UN Special Representative in Haiti said that the country had reached a pivotal moment and was approaching a point of no return.
Speaker BLooking at all of this at the moment, it's almost like the MSS force has been set up to fail.
Speaker BIt's remarkable that we're here talking about the same issues that are impacting the Haitian National Police.
Speaker BAnd we haven't even discussed strategy because the gangs sure have one.
Speaker BHere's Romain Grandmason, a senior expert at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.
Speaker HI mean, the installation of Vilson was incredibly important for the gangs, I think, because before that, most of the shootings, most of the confrontations were not gangs against the police, but it was actually inter gangs wars.
Speaker HSo you would spend so much time, energy, money, weapons, people to actually fight your neighbor.
Speaker HThe fact that they stopped doing this and created this alliance has effectively almost taken Intra gang violence to zero.
Speaker HAnd basically the gangs could therefore concentrate on controlling and organizing their territory and populations, focusing on better organizing extortion mechanisms, trafficking routes for firearms and ammunitions, corruption network, becoming richer and better armed, and also focusing basically on, you know, securing their turfs and securing their areas to make sure that they can wait and fight the Haitian National Police or the MSS when they would come, or actually expand whenever they want.
Speaker HSo instead of being so concerned and bothered by, you know, fighting your neighbor gang, you just focus on organizing your turf and making sure that you're ready for whatever happens.
Speaker HSo it's.
Speaker HIt's been a very, very, very rational choice in a way, and very rational invention that at the beginning was not.
Speaker HWas not necessarily made for success.
Speaker HI mean, the gangs came from years of confrontations, years of massacres, years of making enemies, going at war with each other.
Speaker HAnd they honestly showed something quite astonishing and very unfortunate, which is their ability to actually work together.
Speaker HIf you had asked me a year ago, do you think the gangs will actually get along and fully come into this solid coalition, I would have said no.
Speaker CTo be honest, and in some kind of cruel twist of irony, it's the Haitian state and the international community who appear not to have an effective strategy.
Speaker HWe, the international community, have deployed a troop on the ground, a group of police agents that are present in Haiti.
Speaker HBut there's never been a moment of proper long term or short term organization and operation planning in a very tactical and operative way.
Speaker HHow do you design an operation in a context like Port au Prince?
Speaker HHow do you get proper intel in a context in which you have leaks of information constantly?
Speaker HHow do you conquer a territory?
Speaker HHow do you operate in a very entrenched gang neighborhood?
Speaker HHow do you protect civilians?
Speaker HHow do you enter in the neighborhood?
Speaker HHow do you exit the neighborhood?
Speaker HWhat type of equipment do you need to do so?
Speaker HAnd this has been so blatant in the way that the MSS at the beginning received armored vehicles that were not adapted to the terrain in Haiti.
Speaker HI mean, this is as bad as it got.
Speaker HBasically, that because there was, I think, no strategic planning, at least not enough, the MSS did not receive the proper vehicle.
Speaker HSo it's like asking you to conduct the mission without giving you the appropriate tools.
Speaker HAnd I think this is one of the massive failure of the mss, and I'm not blaming the Kenyan police agents in that case, which are honestly between a rock and a hard place, and they've been at the very same hard place for the past nine months, is that we're blaming them collectively for not achieving and not reaching success.
Speaker HBut we never, until now, we never gave them the tools to actually properly conduct the mission and make it a success.
Speaker HSo right now we're.
Speaker HWe're in this source of impasse in which the MSS is there, but it doesn't have the tools to fully and properly conduct its mission, which is support the HNP on the ground.
Speaker HAnd then you have, unfortunately, a series of issues of bad coordination between the HNP and the mss, probably a lack of trust between the two as well, that lead to badly designed and badly conducted operations that lead to a fact, an unfortunate and sad fact, but that since the MSS deployed in June 24, the National Forces or the international forces have been unable to recover a single inch of territory from the gangs.
Speaker CThat's right.
Speaker CSince the MSS has deployed alongside the Haitian national police, not only has territory not been recaptured from the gangs, but the gangs have expanded.
Speaker HThe gangs control more territory within Port au Prince.
Speaker HThey control more territory outside of Port au Prince.
Speaker HThey control more territories on the coasts of Haiti.
Speaker HThey control more accesses to the Dominican Republic at the border than ever before.
Speaker HAnd I think it's also why it's so critical to not necessarily reinvent the will and think like, how can we manage to change the MSS and turn it into something different?
Speaker HIt's actually maybe a moment to recognize that we have failed at the very beginning when operations planning did not not occur and actually go back to it and literally sit down and make sure that there is some actual strategic planning on how to conduct an operation, on how to regain this territory or the other territory.
Speaker HWhere do we focus?
Speaker HFor example, last year when the MSS was deployed, they said, we will focus on regaining control of strategic and crucial roads in the country.
Speaker HAnd then we will focus on retaking and regaining control on strategic accesses to the ports, for example, because Haiti is half an island.
Speaker HSo if you, if you control the port, you control the country.
Speaker HThat was not a bad idea back then.
Speaker HThe thing is, we haven't seen it on the ground.
Speaker HWe haven't seen, like, how, how do you actually take control of the port back?
Speaker HHow do you get to the port?
Speaker HHow do you occupy a territory?
Speaker BThe latest news coming out of the US is that the Haitian gangs be designated terrorist organizations.
Speaker BVivonsom and the Grand Griff gang have been added.
Speaker BMarco Rubio said that the age of impunity for those supporting violence in Haiti is over.
Speaker BHow effective this will be, time will tell.
Speaker BBut in the meantime, the humanitarian situation Gets worse and worse.
Speaker CDoctors Without Borders posted pictures on X just a few weeks ago of their vehicles riddled with bullets and broken glass, clearly marked with the organization's logo.
Speaker CThe vehicles also sported multiple round stickers, the border of which was a thick red line giving way to a white inner circle, the kind you'd see on a road sign.
Speaker CBut in the centre of this sticker was a black automatic rifle with a red cross over the top of it.
Speaker CThe pictures shared showed bullet holes and shattered glass right next to these stickers.
Speaker CThey were fired upon by gangs as they evacuated a hospital in Port au Prince, where they'd recently announced a suspension of services due to the escalating violence.
Speaker CFortunately, no one was killed.
Speaker CWe've heard about the earthquake in 2010, something that the country never truly recovered from then, the further descent into chaos after the assassination of President Moise and of course, the rise of the gangs.
Speaker CRemember, the population of Haiti is around 11 million.
Speaker CAccording to current estimates, a million people are now internally displaced, many with nowhere to live.
Speaker CAs their houses were burnt down, they have no possessions because they could only take what they could carry.
Speaker CThese criminal gangs have got their feet planted on the neck of the Haitian population.
Speaker BHere's Bill O'Neill, the UN Independent Expert on the human rights situation in Haiti.
Speaker AThe humanitarian situation is absolutely catastrophic.
Speaker AI've been to Haiti.
Speaker AI've worked in and on Haiti many years.
Speaker AAs I said, I've worked in these other countries in West Africa and Nepal and places that have been pretty desperate.
Speaker AHaiti is way up there in terms of humanitarian needs, and it's all driven by insecurity.
Speaker AThis is all caused by the gang violence.
Speaker ASo, for example, pick your sector.
Speaker AHealthcare.
Speaker AVery, very difficult to get access to healthcare in the capital city now.
Speaker ARoughly 63% of the medical facilities are not functioning because of the gangs.
Speaker AThey've either destroyed them, attacked them, occupied them, and that's not an accident.
Speaker AThis is a widespread and systematic attack on the healthcare system by the gangs.
Speaker AThey've attacked professionals, physicians, nurses, technicians, killed some, kidnapped others.
Speaker AEducation, same thing.
Speaker AMany, many schools are closed in the capital because of gang violence.
Speaker AIt's not safe for the children to be going to or from their schools.
Speaker ASometimes the schools have been destroyed or occupied.
Speaker AAnd the third element to this, which I'll mention now, is the internally displaced population, the people who have been forced to flee their homes.
Speaker AIt's now over 1 million.
Speaker AIt's roughly 1 in 10 Haitians are forced to flee their homes because of the violence.
Speaker AThey have miserable conditions and some of them have also occupied schools.
Speaker AIt's, it's, it makes sense because schools have a wall, have a perimeter.
Speaker ASome of them even have running water or a roof.
Speaker AThat then means that is no longer a school.
Speaker AIt's an IDP camp, essentially.
Speaker ASo even if the children in that area could safely go there, they can't anymore because it's, it's a camp, not a school.
Speaker ASo the right to education has been severely affected by the violence, hunger, Right to food, World Food Program.
Speaker AThe statistics come out every month and they get worse and worse.
Speaker AMore than half of Haitians now don't know where their next meal is coming from.
Speaker AAt one point, there were parts of Cite Soleil, the biggest slum area in Port au Prince, that for the first time, I'm told in World Food Program's record keeping, they declared famine conditions in the western hemisphere that had never happened before.
Speaker AThe sexual violence is off the charts, especially of young girls and women in these camps.
Speaker AAlso, we're getting more and more reports.
Speaker AReports recently Doctors Without Borders came out with a report about a month ago that the girls and young women in internally cover topics from all over the world forced into prostitution or out now say they're in charge of the camp.
Speaker CWho knows story about the mother who had her baby from her arms by the gang firing kings.
Speaker AI can go on and on and on, but you get the picture.
Speaker CIt is the gang is.
Speaker CBut the conditions that allowed their rise lies at the defeat of the Haitian political class and the international community.
Speaker CAll the while, it's the people of Haiti that suffer the consequences as they are caught quite literally in the firing line.
Speaker BSo as we approach the end of this episode and this mini series on Haiti, what comes next?
Speaker BHere's Romain.
Speaker HWe have the MSS there and the international community.
Speaker HIn that case, the us, Canada, France to a certain extent, have put money.
Speaker HKenyans have put people.
Speaker HI think we have to do something to actually make sure that this effort is not absolutely wasted, or we have to cancel it right away and say, you know what, thank you, thanks so much, you can go back home.
Speaker HOtherwise it's an incredible waste of time, energy, personal and money.
Speaker HI mean, there's.
Speaker HWe're talking like probably half a billion dollars, something already spent.
Speaker HIt has to go for something.
Speaker HThe main issue we have right now is the lack of political will to probably back up the MSS a bit more and also to make sure that it actually coordinates and works much better with the Haitian national police.
Speaker HBecause if the coordination and the dialogue and the cooperation between the two do not work, it won't take us anywhere.
Speaker HBecause I don't think right now that the Haitian National Police has alone the ability to retake the territory from the gangs for multiple reasons that go from corruption to lack of people and equipment.
Speaker HBut the MSS doesn't have that ability neither.
Speaker HSo they have to work together.
Speaker HAnd I think now is the moment to actually find a way to relaunch that effort on a single track.
Speaker HWhat we have right now is parallel tracks that don't talk to each other, don't communicate with each other, don't cooperate with each other.
Speaker HTherefore, the effort is so vain that we don't pursue a single common objective on the ground.
Speaker HBut I do think that instead of, you know, imagining right now what could be or not be or might be a peacekeeping operation in Haiti and what type of peacekeeping operation and what model, etc.
Speaker HEtc.
Speaker HWhich has been the debate at the Security Council for the past, you know, three, four months now, the debate is gone.
Speaker HIt's almost vanished again.
Speaker HBut I think instead of only focusing on what could be, you know, a peacekeeping operation in an ideal world and that peacekeeping operation taken and granting the fact that Russia and China would approve it, that peacekeeping operation would come probably in the best case scenario, like 10, 12 months from now, 10, 12 months from the moment it's approved and signed.
Speaker HWhat do we do in the meantime?
Speaker HWe need a plan for now.
Speaker HWe need to show the Haitian population that there is a discussion, there is a plan and there is a will to actually change the country now.
Speaker HNot like three years from now, five years from now.
Speaker HBecause people will tell you, you know what, five years from now, there's going to be nothing left to save here.
Speaker HAnd what's unfortunate is, honestly, over the past year, since the creation of Virance Homme, Living Together, the gang Coalition, the only actor on the ground that has the initiative are the gangs.
Speaker HNot the international community, not the national police, not the government or the transitional presidential council.
Speaker HThe only actor that has the initiative on the ground are the gangs.
Speaker BThat's it for this episode of Deep Dive.
Speaker BI'd like to thank Widlaw, Jacqueline, Bill, Sophie and Romain.
Speaker BIn the podcast notes, I've put links to various papers and analysis into the situation in Haiti produced by the gi.
Speaker BYou'll also find relevant research links used for this episode.
Speaker BFor more research into organized crime around the world, head over to our website, globalinitiative.net.
Speaker Bif you head over to our YouTube page, you can watch the first series of Underworlds with Mark Shaw, where Mark sits down with prominent authors who investigate and write books about organized crime like Nicola Talon and Jake Abbott.
Speaker BThis has been deep dive from the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime.
Speaker BI'm Jack Meekin.
Speaker BVickers, thanks for listening.