‘Haiti’s survival is at stake,’ says UN expert, warning of worsening crisis | UN News
Haiti is in freefall. Gangs are tightening their grip on the capital, violence is spreading, and “suffering permeates all social strata” in a nation teetering on the brink, according to the UN human rights office’s designated expert on the country, William O’Neill.
“The pain is excruciating. Sometimes I forget it, then it comes back. At night, I scream,” she shared.
Despite her trauma, she says she still likes to dance and “dreams of being a psychologist for young survivors.” But resources to support victims remain desperately inadequate, Mr. O’Neill stressed.
Another testimony came from ‘L’, a 12-year-old boy who was forcibly recruited by gangs and is now incarcerated at the Centre de Rééducation des Mineurs in Port-au-Prince, accused of gang association.
“I don't want any more bandits in my country. Later, I’ll be a pilot,” he told Mr. O’Neill. “I just want to go back to the street.”
A nation displaced
Haiti’s spiralling violence has displaced over a million people, with thousands more, forced from their homes in recent weeks. “They have nowhere to go,” said Mr. O’Neill.
The desperation has fuelled tensions between communities.
In one incident, students threw stones at internally displaced people (IDPs) attempting to seek refuge in their school – a stark example of what Mr. O’Neill described as “the desperate turning against the more desperate.”
In makeshift camps, hunger and sexual violence are rampant, and for many, survival hangs by a thread.
A call to action
“Unity and solidarity must guide political action at all levels, in the interests of the population,” Mr. O’Neill urged.
The Haitian State must prioritise the fight against impunity and corruption, which remain the biggest barriers to dismantling gangs, he said.
The response to gang violence must uphold international human rights law, particularly the right to life. “No circumstances, however exceptional, can justify the violation of this fundamental right,” he added.
“There is not a day to lose. There is no alternative,” Mr. O’Neill concluded. “Haiti’s survival is at stake.”
