‘The state doesn’t exist’: Gang violence in Haiti keeps aid at bay
Global News
In October, 17 people from Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries, including one Canadian, were kidnapped in Haiti -- 12 of whom remain held hostage.
A spike in violence has deepened hunger and poverty in Haiti while hindering the very aid organizations combating those problems in a country whose government struggles to provide basic services.
Few relief workers are willing to speak on the record about the cuts, perhaps worried about drawing attention following the October kidnapping of 17 people from Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries, including one Canadian — 12 of whom remain held hostage.
But several confirmed, without giving details, that they had sent some staff out of the country and have been forced to temporarily cut back aid operations.
Gang-related kidnappings and shootings have prevented aid groups from visiting parts of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and beyond where they had previously distributed food, water and other basic goods.
A severe shortage of fuel also has kept agencies from operating at full capacity.
“It’s just getting worse in every way possible,” said Margarett Lubin, Haiti director for CORE, a U.S. nonprofit organization.
“You see the situation deteriorating day after day, impacting life at every level,” Lubin said, adding that aid organizations have gone into “survival mode.”
Few places in the world are so dependent on aid groups as Haiti, a nation frequently called “the republic of NGOs.” Billions of dollars in aid have been poured through hundreds (by some estimates several thousand) of aid groups even as the government has grown steadily weaker and less effective.