Haiti police riot after crime gangs kill 14 officers

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Haiti police riot after crime gangs kill 14 officers

Rebel police officers rioted in Haiti’s capital Port-au-Prince on Thursday following the killing of more than a dozen colleagues by criminal gangs.

The rioting officers blame the government for not taking action.

More than 100 demonstrators blocked streets, burned tyres, broke security cameras and damaged vehicles.

Local media said several officers broke through the gates of the prime minister’s residence and attempted to enter Haiti’s international airport.

Fourteen officers are thought to have died since the start of the year in various gang attacks on police stations.

Seven officers were killed in shootout on Wednesday alone, according to Haiti’s National Police.

According to local Haitian media outlet Vant Bef Info, on Thursday police officers in the capital Port-au-Prince and in the city of Gonaives took to the streets “in anger” and erected flaming barricades.

Some of them reportedly went to the official residence of Prime Minister Ariel Henry, Vant Bef Info said.

When they found it empty, they headed to Port-au-Prince airport where Mr Henry had just landed after a summit in Argentina.

Protesters apparently tried to gain access to the airport by breaking its windows, but Mr Henry managed to slip away, Haiti’s Radio Tele Metronome said.

Many businesses and schools remained shut on Thursday in the wake of the protests.

Port-au-Prince and other cities have been racked for months by escalating deadly gang warfare, and Haitian media have reported that the country has seen a marked rise in kidnappings since the start of the year.

A Haitian human rights group, the National Network of the Defense of Human Rights, said 78 police officers have been killed since Mr Henry came to power in 2021.

Outgunned by the multiple criminal gangs, Haiti’s police have been unable to halt the violence.

In October 2022, the Henry government appealed to the international community for a multi-national security force to help restore order – but the call has so far gone unanswered, despite some increased aid from the US and Canada.

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