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Haiti farming region once more site of gang massacre: Homes burned, residents killed

Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald on

Published in News & Features

A predawn assault by heavily armed gang members has once again left a trail of bodies and burned homes in Haiti’s breadbasket, residents and officials said.

The attack began around 2 a.m. Sunday in the locality of Jean-Denis and its surrounding rural communities in the Lower Artibonite region. Attacks continued around 2 a.m. Monday.

A police source confirmed that at least 16 bodies had been taken to a local morgue, and 10 injured people were receiving treatment at a hospital in the nearby port city of St. Marc. The full extent of the casualties remained unclear, as reports suggests a significantly higher death toll.

Those estimates are as high as 80 dead, Stéphane Dujarric, spokesman for United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, told reporters Monday during the noon press briefing in New York.

“The secretary-general strongly condemns the gang attacks,” he said. “He urges Haitian authorities to conduct a thorough investigation.”

Dujarric said the attack in the Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite communities “underscores the gravity of the security situation faced by the Haitian population.”

The U.N. Integrated Office in Port-au-Prince, he noted, “is closely monitoring developments and remains fully engaged with national partners.”

The attacks unfolded after heavily armed members of the Gran Grif gang stormed the area, opening fire and setting homes ablaze. Some victims were reportedly burned alive, said Bertide Horace, who works with the Commission for Dialogue, Reconciliation and Awareness to Save the Artibonite.

Horace said the commission has confirmed at least 30 dead, but because of the gang’s control of the area it’s difficult to get a definitive count. The commission also received information that at least eight people had been kidnapped by gang members. Videos circulating on social media showed burned houses and bullet-riddled bodies.

 

“There are a lot of people who are unaccounted for, and we can’t yet say if they died,” Horace said.

On Monday, Gran Grif gang leader Luckson Elan described the violence as retaliation in response to attacks in Savien, their base, by the armed group Temepri. The gang wars, along with the self-defense groups that have popped up in response, have turned the region into a hotbed of terror for rural farmers. In March of last year, a member of the Kenya-led Multinational Security Support mission was killed in a gang ambush in the same area where Sunday’s attack unfolded.

Two months later, more than 20 people were killed in the region during a massacre perpetrated by self-defense groups. Among those killed was 86-year-old pastor Jean-Jacques Brutus and members of his congregation who were inside praying at his Maranatha Baptist Church in the community of Préval.

The later attack occurred while people were preparing to participate in a rara festival, a cultural tradition during Easter rooted in this part of the country. To prevent access to the area and hinder a police response, gang members cut off bridges and booby-trapped roads, Horace said.

Gran Grif is one of several armed gangs designated last year by Secretary of State Marco Rubio as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. But the designation, United Nations sanctions against its leader, and a recent $3 million bounty offered by the United States have failed to slow its terror.

Their latest attack comes as the Kenyan troops that are part of the Multinational Security Support mission, which slowed its operations in the region after its officer was killed and the body never recovered, begin to withdraw from Haiti as part of the transition to arrive in Haiti this week.

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©2026 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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