An inside look at how gang warfare in Haiti has devastated daily life

An inside look at how gang warfare in Haiti has devastated daily life

Marcia Biggs:

One place the mission still hasn’t gone is Cite Soleil, where gangs were born decades ago. We were able to access it with the nonprofit organization Way to Health, which provides medical care and food to children there with the tacit permission of the G-Pep gang.

We’re in a tap-tap, which is basically a pickup truck that’s covered. It’s a lot safer to be in a tap-tap than in our own car, because members of the G-Pep gang know this tap-tap.

We cross the front line between the G9 and G-Pep gangs, nicknamed the Death Crossroads. Last year, G9 blocked all other roads to the G-Pep territory and raped or murdered anyone who tried to get out. Once in G-Pep territory, we switch to motorcycles, because a river of sewage and garbage makes the road impassable for cars, a physical reminder to all how forgotten this neighborhood is.

We arrive at Way to Health’s makeshift clinic for sick, malnourished children and their mothers, victims of poverty and nonexistent health care. This baby likely has typhoid. Her mother was killed, so she’s being cared for by her aunt, who says she does the best she can.

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Publish date : 2024-11-20 09:35:00

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