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National News See other National News Articles Title: Gangs Strangle Haiti's Capital as Deaths, Kidnappings Soar Gangs are fighting each other and seizing territory in Haiti's capital with a new intensity and brutality. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) It was about 6 a.m. when Venique Moïse flung open the door of her house and saw dozens of people running their children in one hand and scant belongings in the other as gunfire intensified. Minutes later, she joined the crowd with her own three kids and fled as fires burned nearby, collapsing homes. Over the coming hours and days, the bodies of nearly 200 men, women and children shot, burned or mutilated with machetes by warring gangs were found in that part of Haiti's capital. That Sunday, when the war started, I felt that I was going to die, Moïse said. Gangs are fighting each other and seizing territory in the capital of Port-au-Prince with a new intensity and brutality. The violence has horrified many who feel the country is swiftly unraveling as it tries to recover from the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse and the United Nations prepares to debate the future of its longtime presence in Haiti. Experts say the scale and duration of gang clashes, the power criminals wield and the amount of territory they control has reached levels not seen before. Gangs have forced schools, businesses and hospitals to close as they raid new neighborhoods, seize control of the main roads connecting the capital to the rest of the country and kidnap victims daily, including eight Turkish citizens still held captive, authorities say. Gangs also are recruiting more children than before, arming them with heavy weapons and forming temporary alliances with other gangs in attempts to take over more territory for economic and political gain ahead of the country's general elections, said Jaime Vigil Recinos, the United Nations police commissioner in Haiti. Its astonishing, he told The Associated Press, noting that gang clashes are becoming protracted, ruthless affairs. We are talking about something that Haiti hasnt experienced before. At least 92 civilians and 96 suspected gang members were killed between April 24 and May 16, with another 113 injured, 12 missing and 49 kidnapped for ransom, according to the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. The office warned that the actual number of people killed may be much higher. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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