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Gangs tighten grip on Haiti despite more aggressive policing, UN report finds

By Thomson Reuters Mar 24, 2026 | 12:09 PM

By Aida Pelaez-Fernandez and Sarah Morland

March 24 (Reuters) – One in four Haitians live in areas controlled by criminal gangs, according to a report by the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner ​for Human Rights on Tuesday, which found armed groups continued ‌to consolidate their control over swathes of the Caribbean island despite more aggressive policing.

• At least 5,519 people were killed and 2,608 injured between January 2025 and March 2026, when the government and private military contractor Vectus Global launched anti-gang drone operations.

• ‌Of these, ​over 60% were casualties in anti-gang security ⁠operations, 27% were killed or ⁠injured by gangs, 8% by self-defense groups, 3% by police and 1% by summary executions by local authorities.

• 51 children were killed and 38 injured during security operations, the report found, as stray bullets ​and explosives hit people in their homes or in the streets.

• No investigation into the legality of the security operations appears to have ⁠been opened in this period, nor any ⁠accountability mechanisms put into place for victims.

• Around 90% ​of gang killings resulted from use of firearms that are illegally trafficked from ​neighboring countries.

• The report documented 1,578 victims of rape – including ‌165 children – mostly during gang rapes, as well as attacks on kidnap victims and cases of children coerced into relationships.

• As of the end of 2025, the U.N.-backed security force counted 981 troops – well under half its ⁠goal of 2,500. In September, the Security Council voted to expand its remit but new deployments have yet to arrive.

• “Gangs continue to use violence, including ⁠killings, injuries, kidnappings, human ‌trafficking, rape and sexual exploitation, to exert their dominance ⁠over a population that is bleeding dry,” the ​report said.

• ‌Regarding security operations with Vectus, it said: “Some, or ​even most, of ⁠these drone strikes and helicopter operations could be described as targeted killings … whereas the sole objective of targeted law enforcement operations against individuals should be their arrest and detention.”

• The report called for greater accountability and more mechanisms to keep civilians, particularly minors, safe.

(Reporting by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez and Sarah MorlandEditing ​by Rod Nickel)