PORT-AU-PRINCE, July 21 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Thousands of Haitians are trapped in the capital city, Port-au-Prince, without access to water, food, or other essential supplies, according to aid groups and a local official.
Residents in the neighbourhood of Cité Soleil have been isolated by ongoing fighting between rival groups vying for control, according to the neighbourhood’s mayor Joël Janeus.
“The situation is critical, and it’s getting worse by day. My team and I counted 52 dead and 110 people injured. The gangs have been shooting for nearly a week now and they still have munitions,” Janeus said on Wednesday.
“I am calling for the government to intervene before more people die, thousands of people are trapped without food and water,” Janeus said, adding that he himself is in hiding.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a medical humanitarian group, had warned earlier in the week that lives were at risk due to the difficulty of delivering vital aid, including water, in an embattled area of Cité Soleil called Brooklyn.
“Along the only road into Brooklyn, we have encountered corpses that are decomposing or being burned,” Mumuza Muhindo, MSF head of mission, in a press release.
“They could be people killed during the clashes or people trying to leave who were shot—it is a real battlefield. It is not possible to estimate how many people have been killed,” he added.
Three MSF health workers living in the affected area of Brooklyn are tending to those harmed by the fighting, the group has said.
Haiti has suffered from violent instability for years. After former president Jovenel Moïse was assassinated in July last year, his successor Ariel Henry vowed to improve security. Nevertheless, kidnappings and gang violence continue to plague the Caribbean nation. — NNN-AGENCIES