The death toll in a gang attack on a Haitian town rises to at least 115
Send a link to a friend
[October 10, 2024]
By EVENS SANON and PIERRE-RICHARD LUXAMA
PONT-SONDÉ, Haiti (AP) — The death toll in a brutal gang attack last
week on a small town in central Haiti has risen to 115, a local official
told The Associated Press on Wednesday.
The attack on residents of Pont-Sondé on Oct. 3 was one of the biggest
massacres that Haiti has seen in recent history.
Myriam Fièvre, mayor of the nearby city of Saint-Marc, said Wednesday
that the toll had risen to 115 and would likely keep rising because
authorities are still looking for bodies and haven’t been able to access
certain areas of the town.
“We are working to make sure that the population is protected,” she said
in a phone interview.
The U.N. had previously said that at least 70 people were killed last
week when the Gran Grif gang invaded the town in the central Artibonite
region.
The victims included babies, young mothers and the elderly, with the
gang approaching Pont-Sondé via canoes to catch residents by surprise,
according to a local human rights group.
Survivors have questioned why authorities did not do anything to stop
the attack since the gang had warned in a video posted on social media
that it planned to target Pont-Sondé.
A day after the attack, officials replaced the police commissioner who
oversees the Artibonite region, which has seen a surge of gang violence
in recent years, with at least 20 criminal groups operating in the area,
according to the U.N.

More than 6,200 survivors have fled Pont-Sondé and temporarily settled
in the coastal city of Saint-Marc and surrounding areas.
[to top of second column]
|

A cemetery worker prepares a grave days after a deadly gang attack
on Pont-Sonde, Haiti, Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024. (AP Photo/Odelyn
Joseph)

A majority of them are staying with relatives, but more than 750
others have nowhere to go and are sleeping on the floors of a
church, a school and a public plaza in Saint-Marc, according to the
U.N.’s International Organization for Migration.
As Saint-Marc struggles with the sudden influx of people, Fièvre
warned that the Gran Grif gang is infiltrating nearby communities
after attacking Pont-Sondé.
Haiti’s National Human Rights Defense Network has said the gang was
angry that a local self-defense group was trying to limit gang
activity in Pont-Sondé and prevent it from profiting off a makeshift
road toll it had recently established nearby.
Gran Grif has about 100 members and has been accused of crimes
including murder, rape, robberies and kidnappings. It was formed
after former legislator Prophane Victor began arming young men
nearly a decade ago to secure his election and control of the area,
according to the U.N
Victor and the Gran Grif leader, Luckson Elan, were sanctioned by
the U.S. last month. Elan also was sanctioned by the U.N. Security
Council, which noted that Gran Grif “is the largest and most
powerful” gang in Artibonite, committing nine mass kidnappings from
October 2023 to January 2024, including that of 157 people.
___
Sanon reported from Port-au-Prince, Haiti
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |