Haiti police block streets, break into airport to protest officer
killings
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[January 27, 2023]
By Steven Aristil and Harold Isaac
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) -Haitian police officers on Thursday blocked
streets and forced their way into the country's main airport to protest
the recent killing of officers by armed gangs expanding their grip on
the Caribbean nation.
Protesters in civilian clothes who identified themselves as police first
attacked Prime Minister Ariel Henry's official residence, according to a
Reuters witness, and then flooded the airport as Henry was arriving from
a trip to Argentina.
Henry was temporarily stuck in the airport, but returned to his
residence in Port-au-Prince later on Thursday, followed by police
protesters. A Reuters witness heard heavy gunfire near his home.
Haiti's National Police and the Prime Minister's Office did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
Roads around Port-au-Prince and in several cities to the north were
blocked by protesters.
A group of U.S. government officials were visiting Haiti at the time,
and a U.S. State Department spokesperson said all Washington's personnel
were accounted for and they had moved some meetings as a precaution.
Haitian human rights group RNDDH said in a statement that 78 police
officers had been killed since Henry came to power in July 2021,
averaging five each month, saying the prime minister and the head of the
national police Frantz Elbe were "responsible for each of the 78 lives
lost during their reign."
"History will remember they did nothing to protect and preserve the
lives of these agents who chose to serve their country," it added.
Late on Thursday, The Bahamas' foreign ministry said the country's prime
minister had ordered all Bahamians, including its diplomatic personnel,
to leave Haiti as soon as security conditions permit.
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A demonstrator holds up a sign reading:
"Too much police blood is being spilled. We can't take it anymore"
during a protest for the recent killings of police officers by armed
gangs, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti January 26, 2023. REUTERS/Ralph Tedy
Erol
Haitian police had earlier in the day stopped the neighboring
country's local charge d'affaires and taken their vehicle and
weapons, it added, saying all its diplomats were safe, as well as
five citizens who had been trapped around the airport.
Last week, four police officers near the capital were killed by the
Vitelhomme gang, while shootouts on Wednesday with the Savien gang
in the town of Liancourt left another seven officers dead, according
to Haiti's National Police and local media reports.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Brian Nichols expressed
condolences to the families of police officers killed in the latest
violence, and said the United States would continue to "impose costs
on those responsible for this heinous violence."
Asked how the developments could affect efforts to craft an
international armed intervention, the U.S. State Department
spokesperson told Reuters the United States was still working with
international partners to develop "a framework" for a security
mission to "provide security and stability."
The United Nations is discussing sending a foreign strike force to
confront the criminal groups. The proposal was originally made three
months ago but no country has offered to lead such a force.
(Reporting by Steven Aristil, Harold Isaac and Ralph Tedy Erol in
Port-au-Prince, Brian Ellsworth in Caracas, Matt Spetalnick in
Washington; Additional reporting by Sarah Morland; Editing by Sandra
Maler and Christopher Cushing)
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