HAITI'S humanitarian Situation gets Worse with Mass Displacements
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, January 27, 2024 - Despite lip service from the United States, Canada, CARICOM and the EU, the humanitarian situation in Haiti is getting worse, forcing more and more people to leave their homes and the country because of violence kidnappings and armed gangs which cast a shadow over the lives of the population.
"More than half of the people currently displaced in the country were displaced in 2023," the International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported in its latest assessment.
In December 2023 alone - the IOM specified - more than 310,000 individuals had to leave their homes, and these figures illustrate the constant worsening of the humanitarian and security situation in the country, particularly in Port-au-Prince.
Recently, the Director General of Civil Protection, Jerry Chandler, admitted that the displaced are living in precarious conditions.
More than 60% of forced displacements in #Haiti happened in 2023, according to @UNmigration, amid a surge in killings and kidnappings and widespread sexual violence. The latest displacement figures reflect the severity of the ongoing crisis in Haiti ߑ禬t;a href="https://t.co/gOdcRj1Lkq">https://t.co/gOdcRj1Lkq
— Christine Caldera (@ce_caldera) January 26, 2024
Thousands of people had to leave their homes to seek refuge with relatives, in shelters or public spaces such as squares, churches and gymnasiums.
Chandler acknowledged that the situation of the displaced is very difficult, as they survive in overcrowded conditions and without basic sanitation, which could lead to waterborne diseases such as cholera, which has already claimed a thousand lives since October 2022.
In Haiti, over 4,700 people were killed and almost 2,500 others kidnapped in 2023 alone.
— Human Rights Watch (@hrw) January 25, 2024
There's opportunity to "support Haitian efforts towards a true democratic governance [...] and to end the deadly cycles of violence and abuse," @TiranaHassan tells the UN Security Council. pic.twitter.com/CXJSlEF1eU
The International Organization for Migration, the World Food Program, the Economic and Social Assistance Fund and the Social Assistance Fund do not have sufficient resources to care for all the victims.