Haitian Crisis - Organized Crime, Cannibalism, Election Problems And Foreign Interventions

Haiti is having some issues lately

”Lately”...kek

I don't feel bad for them whatsoever. That's what you get for genociding whitey, hateys.

They’ve been paying for that, quite literally, across two centuries. To the tune of almost $30-Billion. This is just another French created mess the USA has inherited. Nuke the site from orbit or pay the Dominicans to launch another Operation Niggerknocker. As tired as we are of basketcase Haiti, it pales in comparison to how tired the DR is of sharing an island with them.
 
I wonder when eventually it will return to be the norm to straight up execute criminal gangs rather than just keeping them in a prison industrial complex.

They are way ahead of you. They don't only execute criminals, they also make authentic native cuisine out of them too. Source: Gore sites. You can find them in the people dying videos thread, if you are curious, but it gets gruesome fast, be warned.
 

Haitian gang boss who 'invokes Voodoo spirit of death' is Barbecue's biggest threat​

Barbecue - the notorious gang boss who plunged Haiti into chaos over the weekend - has a child-kidnapping rival who channels the Vodou spirit of death.

Jimmy 'Barbecue' Cherizier is the leader of the Revolutionary Forces of the G9 Family and Allies, a coalition of Haitian gangs whose uprising on Sunday (March 3) led to a 72-hour state of emergency.

Barbecue's gangs stormed two prisons and released some 3,800 prisoners, unleashing a wave of violence. Roughly 80% of the capital, Port-au-Prince, is now thought to be under the control of criminals. More than a dozen people have been killed.

Former elite police officer Barbecue is demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Ariel Henry (whose whereabouts are known after travelling to Kenya).

Haiti has more than 200 gangs that exist within a complex network of alliances and grudges. Last year, Insight Crime described 400 Mawozo as the "largest" individual criminal organisation on the Caribbean island.

Joseph Wilson, known as Lanmò San Jou (which translates to "death has no appointed time" - catchy!) is the leader of 400 Mawozo (which loosely translates to "400 Simpletons"). His gang previously aligned themselves with another coalition, G-Pep, with the intention of preventing Barbecue's mob gaining supremacy.

Wilson is wanted for murder, attempted murder, kidnapping and vehicle theft, and in 2021 made international headlines when 400 Mawozo kidnapped 16 American missionaries and one Canadian.

Wilson released a video statement in October 2021 threatening to kill members of the Haitian government as well as the 17 hostages, five of whom were children. He was dressed as Bawon Samdi, the spirit of the dead in Haitian Vodou (sometimes spelled Voodoo).

Wearing Bawon's beard, purple and black clothing, top hat and silver cross, Wilson invoked a spell in the spirit's name. He said the politicians will "cry blood" and vowed to shoot the hostages if his demands, including a $17million ransom, weren't met. Eventually some of the hostages escaped while others were released amid talk of a mystery donor giving $1million per person.

Experts describe 400 Mawozo as Haiti's "most worrying criminal organisation". They are said to have been innovative in their use of mass "express kidnapping" - where small groups take victims and release them after a few days for a small ransom.

"With over 1,000 members scattered around the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, the 400 Mawozo is said to even have a waiting list of potential youngsters who want to enrol," gang expert Eric Calpas said.

There were concerns 400 Mawozo were infiltrating the government - in the same way Barbecue's G9 coalition has - prior to the carnage we've seen in Haiti in the last few days. One anonymous government source told Insight Crime: "There are 400 Mawozo wearing suits and ties."

Article Link
 
Haiti is having some issues lately

Haiti has been in continuous crisis since 1791. If there is no strong army in haiti, you get gangsterism in the streets. If there is a strong army in haiti, you get a coup eventually. Everything in the country is utterly hopeless. There is nothing that can be done that will make anything better.

Every possible solution has already been tried several times already from monarchy to rule by the US marines.

Sending African police to Haiti expecting things to get better is insane.
 
Problem: Large parts of the world are becoming inhospitable because of "climate change." Many millions will need a new homeland.
Also problem: Haitians exist, a culture so absolutely retarded that they spend what little money they have to feed their children literal dirt.
Solution: Give Haiti to desperate people smart enough not to eat dirt. Don't ask where the originals Haitians go. It's not a crime against humanity if no one asks questions.
 
The Prime Minister of Haiti has now fled the country. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken pressed Haiti’s prime minister, Ariel Henry, to announce his resignation and a political transition in a series of phone calls that took place Thursday and were described as “tense” by senior State Department officials.

Some more photos have come out:
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Including a video:
 
USA may be sending some Marines to Haiti.

US mulls deploying Marine security team to Haiti amid gang crisis​

Correction Friday 9:45 a.m. ET: This story was corrected on Friday to note that the fleet has not actually deployed to Haiti. The defense official said on Friday he had misunderstood their status and had been discussing what were actually contingency operations.

The United States is considering deploying an elite Marine security team to Haiti because of a deteriorating security situation there, according to a defense official.

The Marines would be deployed at the request of the State Department, according to the defense official. Marine Corps Times asked the State Department for further details Thursday and didn’t receive a response.

“Deploying a FAST platoon is one option at the DoD’s disposal should the DoS request assistance with security at the U.S. Embassy in Port Au Prince,” Maj. Mason Englehart, a spokesman for Marine Corps Forces South, wrote in an email to Marine Corps Times on Friday.

Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry is struggling to stay in power as he tries to return home, where gang attacks have shuttered his country’s main international airport and freed more than 4,000 inmates in recent days.

Henry remained in Puerto Rico as of midday Wednesday. He landed in the U.S. territory on Tuesday after he was barred from landing in the neighboring Dominican Republic, where officials closed the airspace to flights to and from Haiti.

In 2023, more than 8,400 people in Haiti were reported killed, injured or kidnapped, more than double the number reported in 2022. The U.N. estimates that nearly half of Haiti’s 11 million people need humanitarian assistance, but the 2024 humanitarian appeal for $674 million has received just $17 million — about 2.5% of what’s needed.

On Wednesday, the U.S. embassy in Haiti urged Americans in the country to depart as soon as possible and said it would be on limited operations Thursday.

“Embassy operations may be further affected during the week because of gang-related violence and its effects on transportation and infrastructure,” the embassy said in the security alert.

The Corps’ fleet antiterrorism security teams, often known as FAST, are deployed around the world for limited periods of time to reinforce or recapture U.S. assets.

FAST Marines receive specialized training on noncombatant evacuation operations, close-quarters battle, military operations in urban terrain, convoy operations, shipboard operations and specialized security operations, according to a page on the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service.

The teams are part of the Yorktown, Virginia-based Marine Corps Security Force Regiment.

In 2019, fleet antiterrorism security team Marines embarked a U.S. merchant vessel to provide security as it transited the Strait of Hormuz, located between Oman and Iran.

In 2010, after a devastating earthquake struck Haiti, they were sent to assist the Marine security guards who already had been guarding the U.S. embassy in the capital Port-au-Prince.

At a press conference Wednesday, Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, denied that the United States was considering sending U.S. forces to Haiti.

Jean-Pierre said noted that Kenya had agreed to send police officers on a security mission to Haiti.

“So, that was recently signed, and that’s going to move forward,” she said. “But there is no plan to bring U.S. forces into Haiti.”

In 2021, President Joe Biden sent Marines from the Marine Security Guard Security Augmentation Unit to the Port-Au-Prince embassy “out of an abundance of caution” following the assassination of the Haitian president but insisted sending U.S. forces to stabilize the country was “not on the agenda.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Article Link
 
USA may be sending some Marines to Haiti.
I will never understand why anyone would join the US military now, other than it's basically just a bailout for burnouts who fucked up too badly in high school to go to college. You're just going to die in some nigger country in a conflict that means nothing to us.
 
An article going over the key figures who have the highest chance to become the next leader of Haiti.

If Haiti falls to the gangs, who could rise to power? The list includes some alarming names
Miami Herald (archive.ph)
By Jacqueline Charles
2024-03-09 09:43:11GMT

The prime minister is stranded abroad and under pressure to resign. At home, political and civil leaders are unable to reach consensus to build a new government. Armed gangs have taken over most of the capital and continue to gain ground. An armed international force that might help is stuck half a world away.

That is the situation on the ground in Haiti, which remains mired in such chaos and near-anarchy that the United States fears any semblance left of government may collapse at any moment.

It’s raising a disturbing question: In the middle of the violence and the vacuum of power, who is going to end up running the country?

One alarming prospect: The situation is ripe for Haitians — victimized by the growing wave of unending violence, killings, kidnappings and rapes since the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in 2021 — to welcome a ruthless authoritarian leader who promises to put an end to the bloodshed.

History is full of men who rose to power because panicked populations turned to anyone who could end the chaos. Haiti could soon find itself in a similar situation, said veteran diplomat and experienced Haiti hand Thomas Shannon, a former under secretary of state who spent nearly 35 years in the U.S. foreign service.

“If we’re not careful we’re going to have another brigand claiming to be the rightful leader of Haiti,” Shannon said. “It’s very distressing.”

The gangs, Shannon added, are the only ones “working with completely alienated and disaffected people to address the immediacy of their concerns in a way that neither the government nor the international community can.”

Said Haiti-born political scientist Robert Fatton: “The gangs might well emerge as the arbiter of Haiti’s immediate future.”

Events over the past few days have hastened the maneuvering for power — Prime Minister Ariel Henry remains in Puerto Rico, facing U.S. pressure to step down. A multinational force to be led by Kenya to help Haiti appears far from deploying.

There is no shortage of candidates in Haiti who covet leadership. Some can make a case to a degree of legitimacy — former politicians, respected members of civic society, previous government officials. And some are essentially warlords with violent histories who have amassed a large armed following and are already laying a claim to leadership.

Here’s a look at some of the key figures jostling for power.

Guy Philippe, a former coup leader who led the paramilitary overthrow of President Jean Bertrand Aristide in 2004. Philippe, 56, recently finished serving a six-year prison sentence in the U.S. on drug trafficking-related charges and was deported to Haiti in November. Since his return, he has been calling for Prime Minister Henry’s ouster, joining forces with members of an armed government environmental agency that has emerged as a paramilitary group.

While rallying the public to follow his revolution, he has also sought support from gangs and established politicians. Earlier this year, Philippe, who also enjoys the tacit backing of some members of Haiti’s private sector, extended a hand to Jimmy Chérizier, the influential gang leader who declared last week that the gangs are now one and called on gang members to take down Henry’s government “by any means necessary.”

While pleading with gangs to stop killing people, Philippe, a former police chief of Delmas in the capital and the northern city of Cap-Haïtien, also told the armed groups to listen to Chérizier. This week, as Henry struggled to return to Haiti, Philippe made a grab for the presidency as head of the Réveil National political party and as part of an alliance with one of Haiti’s most well-known leftist leaders, Jean-Charles Moïse. The latter proposed a three-person presidential council that would include Philippe, a member of the judiciary and a representative of the religious community.

Philippe’s National Awakening party has proposed that he lead the council despite Haiti’s constitutional ban on convicted felons holding office, and even announced on Tuesday his pending installation in the National Palace as transitional president under the proposed council, which has issued a five-point plan for governance. The installation didn’t happen but all eyes remain on the convicted felon who has been gathering crowds.

Philippe walks with a politician’s swagger as he works crowds. His ability to rally them, coupled with the Robin Hood reputation he developed as he evaded capture by U.S. drug agents for nearly a dozen years, has only helped increase his popularity. Fluent in English and Spanish, he’s taken his opposition to any foreign intervention directly to the Kenyan people, releasing a video in English warning that “imperialism is trying to use African and Africans again to stop our movement to free our country.”

Philippe is among a group of Haitian police officers who were trained at the police academy in Ecuador. That has further helped his popularity despite his well-known reputation within the ranks for helping turn Haiti into a narco state by accepting bribes to protect drug smugglers who used the island to ship Colombian cocaine to the U.S.

In a video address that circulated on Thursday,Philippe saluted the population for their “peaceful revolution,” and called on them to remain mobilized and vigilant.

“We are advancing and we will get to where we promised,” he said. “It’s the only way we can find a Haiti that is more just, with more equality.”

Jimmy Chérizier, the leader of the G9 Family and Allies gang alliance goes by the nickname “Barbecue.” During press conferences he is armed and often dressed in camouflage gear and sporting a beret. Human-rights groups have linked him to a host of violent attacks and massacres, which he has denied. Chérizier, 47, has warned that if Henry doesn’t step down there will be “civil war that will lead to genocide.”

“Today, I am asking you, ‘Drop Ariel Henry,’ “ he said on Feb. 29 when he announced the gangs’ movement to take down the government. “Ariel Henry will fall.”

In 2021, Chérizier catapulted himself on the international stage by blocking the country’s main fuel terminal at the seaport, fanning a humanitarian crisis, and demanding Henry’s ouster. His second blockade a year later amid a deadly cholera outbreak led to Henry to request the world’s help to quell the violence by deploying an armed international force.

A former cop with the Haiti National Police, Chérizier spent 14 years in the force and was still on the payroll when he and two other members of President Jovenel Moïse’s government allegedly carried out a 2018 massacre in Port-au-Prince’s La Saline neighborhood. The incident was cited as among the reasons he was sanctioned by both the U.S. and the United Nations. Well-spoken and media savvy, Chérizier presents himself as a revolutionary fighting the elites and a system that has long victimized the poor and downtrodden.

Attempting to sound more like a statesman than a warlord, he turns his press events into a soapbox about Haiti’s problems, though he sometimes wears a bulletproof vest while speaking. “We are fighting for another society — another Haiti,” he often says. But according to a U.N. report, “Throughout 2018 and 2019, Cherizier led armed groups in coordinated, brutal attacks in Port-au-Prince neighborhoods.”

Chérizier’s critics say he makes his money through extortion and protection rackets that earn him and his gang top dollars. Since the U.N. in October approved the deployment of a Multinational Security Support mission to Haiti, Chérizier has publicly warned against foreign intervention and asked for amnesty for gang members.

He announced last week that all of the gangs have banded together under one umbrella, “Viv Ansanm,” Creole for Live Together.

“Haitian people, please, this is your battle,” he said, encouraging the public to support the movement and to refuse government efforts to stop it. “Today, the moment has arrived for us to do legitimate violence. Take to the streets with everything you have.”

Jean-Charles Moïse, also known as Moïse Jean-Charles. An outspoken leftist leader who recently called on Haitians to “destroy the country” if Henry doesn’t leave power. Jean-Charles, 56, thrives on theatrics — he’s known for riding a horse during protest marches — and promotes his opposition to U.S. involvement in Haiti. His supporters fly the Russian flag as well as the red-and-black flag of the Duvalier dictatorship that ruled Haiti for decades.

He has warned foreign diplomats to stay out of Haiti’s internal affairs or risk being kicked out of the country.

Although Jean-Charles is a backer of the five-point plan, he recently came out in support of appeals court Judge Durin Duret Jr., one of the members of the proposed three-member presidential council.

Like other political figures, Jean-Charles, a former senator and presidential candidate, has his eye on the presidency. Any involvement in a transition would most likely make him ineligible to run if elections are set, and he is seen as more likely to seek to be the power behind the presidency.

In 2022, while transiting through Miami, the ex-lawmaker had his U.S. visa revoked and accused Washington of targeting him.

Jean-Charles has acknowledged the oddity of his alliance with Philippe, the man who led a bloody rebellion against his one-time mentor, Aristide.

Durin Duret, Jr. A judge on Haiti’s Court of Appeals who was appointed in 2014 to lead the investigation into former President-for-life Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier when he made a surprise return to Haiti from exile in France.

In 2021, human-rights activists and lawyers accused Duret of denying justice in Haiti to victims of the brutal regime, noting that he had not submitted his reports on Duvalier’s crimes to the court of appeals. A former president of the National Association of Haitian Magistrates, Duret also sits on the Superior Council of the Judiciary, a judicial oversight body, as the representative for the Court of Appeals.

Duret’s name was first cited by Jean-Charles as the person who should take charge of the transition. The move has led some political observers to believe that he’s a proxy for Jean-Charles. Duret hasn’t made any public declarations about the presidency but a source told the Miami Herald he’s been working the phones in recent days, expressing interest and rallying support for the proposition.
 
USA may be sending some Marines to Haiti.
That'd be a fun deployment for them. 1990's Somalia on turbo meth nigger AIDS without the ability to defend yourself from the starving horde of diversity.
I expect them to be set up to die by Joe Biden and the Pentagon faggots.
 
The Prime Minister of Haiti has now fled the country. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken pressed Haiti’s prime minister, Ariel Henry, to announce his resignation and a political transition in a series of phone calls that took place Thursday and were described as “tense” by senior State Department officials.

Some more photos have come out:
View attachment 5801816View attachment 5801817View attachment 5801818View attachment 5801819
Including a video:
View attachment 5801821
how schizo am i for having the first question upon seeing these pictures being "what if these are AI generated fakes and there isn't even anything happening in haiti?"
 
I haven't seen it mentioned here or in the other threads about this, but the current President/Prime Minister Ariel Henry is only the acting head of state...
Ariel_Henry_2023.jpg
(This is him)

Because the previous guy, Jovenel Moïse
Kelly_Craft_poses_a_photo_with_Haitian_President_Moise_(cropped).jpg

was assassinated in a professional military hit-job in his own home. The guards literally let these guys come in and kill him. It's been alleged that both he and previous acting President Claude Joseph were both in on this assassination as a way to either scheme power in the country, or more likely to prevent Moïse from carrying out his plan to disrupt the drug trade within the country which threatened a lot of powerful people in Haiti.
 
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