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Haitian Police Vow Crackdown as Gang Violence Displaces Over 1 Million
Haitian authorities have pledged to intensify their crackdown on gang violence as armed groups continue to tighten their grip on Port-au-Prince, forcing over 1 million people from their homes. According to a UN human rights expert, gangs now control 85% of the capital, spreading terror and displacing families in unprecedented numbers.
This week, fresh gang attacks in western Port-au-Prince forced authorities to evacuate students from a school near the historic Oloffson Hotel after heavy gunfire erupted in the area. Meanwhile, reports circulated on social media of a group of priests trapped inside a church in Carrefour-Feuilles, a neighborhood targeted by the Viv Ansanm gang coalition late Tuesday.
Police Plan New Strategy Against Gangs
Haiti’s Deputy Police Spokesman Lionel Lazarre stated that law enforcement is actively preventing gangs from expanding their territorial control.
“They’re trying to take more areas, but police are there, making sure that doesn’t happen,” Lazarre said during a press conference on Wednesday. He confirmed that police have developed new anti-gang strategies but withheld details for security reasons.
In a recent operation, police seized 10,000 bullets, weapons, and drugs from a minibus in Mirebalais, northeast of Port-au-Prince. However, tensions escalated when two of the four suspects were lynched by a mob on Sunday, while the others managed to escape.
UN Warns of Worsening Humanitarian Crisis
The latest wave of violence follows a visit by William O’Neill, the UN’s human rights expert on Haiti, who warned that the situation is worse than ever.
“These violent criminal groups continue to extend and consolidate their hold even beyond the capital,” O’Neill said. “They kill, rape, terrorize, and burn homes, orphanages, schools, hospitals, and places of worship.”
O’Neill emphasized the urgent need to strengthen Haiti’s police force, which has just 9,000–10,000 officers for a country of 11 million people. In contrast, the neighboring Dominican Republic, with a similar population, has a police force of 50,000.
He also called for the reinforcement of the Kenya-led multinational security mission, which deployed 1,000 officers in June. According to O’Neill, a well-equipped force of 2,500 personnel could effectively dismantle and overpower the gangs terrorizing the country.
US Extends Flight Ban Amid Violence
Amid escalating violence, the United States extended its ban on flights to Haiti’s capital until September 8, citing security concerns. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) initially imposed the ban in November after gangs opened fire on three commercial planes. It was set to expire Wednesday but has now been prolonged due to ongoing instability.
With gang violence worsening and humanitarian conditions deteriorating, Haiti’s crisis continues to deepen, leaving millions displaced and vulnerable in what experts call one of the most severe security crises in the region.
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EU Must End ‘Naivety’ on Trade and Confront China’s Industrial Strategy, Says French Minister
France’s Minister for Foreign Trade, Nicolas Forissier, has called on the European Union to abandon what he described as “naivety” in its approach to global trade, urging a tougher stance on countries accused of distorting markets through industrial policy and trade practices.
Speaking in an interview with Euronews’ 12 Minutes With programme, Forissier said Europe must respond more firmly to what he described as the weaponisation of trade dependencies, warning that China in particular could damage its own long-term interests by undermining European industry.
“The Chinese have to understand that they won’t win anything if they destroy the European industry and then the European market, which is an essential market for them,” he said. “We must no longer be naive.”
His comments come as the European Commission prepares to hold an “orientation debate” next week on how to respond to a surge of low-cost Chinese imports. The discussion is expected to shape possible new trade defence measures, with further talks likely when EU leaders meet in Brussels in mid-June.
Forissier said the shift in thinking was not limited to China alone but applied to any country using commercial leverage to gain strategic advantage. “It is not only China,” he said. “It is all the countries that weaponise trade.”
Among the proposals under consideration is a requirement for EU companies to diversify supply chains, sourcing components from at least three different suppliers in order to reduce dependency on any single foreign market. Asked whether he supported such a measure, Forissier replied: “Yes, we have to.”
Other options include targeted tariffs on sensitive industries such as chemicals, alongside stronger use of anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tools to counter imports priced below domestic market levels. These measures are designed to address concerns over overcapacity in China’s industrial sector and its impact on European manufacturers.
The debate is taking place against a backdrop of widening trade imbalances. EU goods imports from China exceeded exports by €359.3 billion in 2025, marking an increase of nearly 20% compared with the previous year.
China has already warned it could retaliate if the bloc imposes new restrictions, raising concerns about potential escalation in trade tensions between two of the world’s largest economies.
France has repeatedly pushed for a more assertive European trade policy, arguing that state subsidies, export controls on raw materials and industrial overproduction in major economies are distorting global markets.
Forissier stressed that Europe must maintain open dialogue with Beijing while defending its own industrial base. “We try to respect the Chinese,” he said. “The Chinese have to respect us, and this is the message European institutions have to send.”
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