‘MONSTROUS CRIME’: The killings were overseen by a powerful gang leader who was convinced his son’s illness was caused by voodoo practitioners, a civil organization said
AFP, PORT-AU-PRINCE
Nearly 200 people in Haiti were killed in brutal weekend violence reportedly orchestrated against voodoo practitioners, with the government on Monday condemning a massacre of “unbearable cruelty.”
The killings in the capital, Port-au-Prince, were overseen by a powerful gang leader convinced that his son’s illness was caused by followers of the religion, the civil organization the Committee for Peace and Development (CPD) said.
It was the latest act of extreme violence by powerful gangs that control most of the capital in the impoverished Caribbean country mired for decades in political instability, natural disasters and other woes.
A man carries chairs past the wreckages of burnt vehicles as he flees home following violence by armed gangs in Port-au-Prince on Sunday.
Photo: Reuters
“He decided to cruelly punish all elderly people and voodoo practitioners who, in his imagination, would be capable of sending a bad spell on his son,” a statement from the Haiti-based group said.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the “horrific” violence, which his spokesman said left at least 184 people, including 127 elderly men and women, dead.
Calling the bloody episode an “act of barbarity, of unbearable cruelty,” the office of Haitian Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aime said “this monstrous crime constitutes a direct attack on humanity.”
Both the CPD and the UN said that the killings took place in the capital’s western coastal neighborhood of Cite Soleil.
Reached by telephone by AFP, a resident confirmed the attacks and said that his 76-year-old father was among the victims.
“The bandits set fire to his body. The family cannot even organize a burial for him since we were unable to recover the body,” he said on condition of anonymity so as not to compromise the safety of other relatives.
“I also fear for their lives,” he said. “I will try to get them out.”
“The gang’s soldiers were responsible for identifying victims in their homes to take them to the chief’s stronghold to be executed,” the CPD said.
“Reliable sources within the community report that more than a hundred people were massacred, their bodies mutilated and burned in the street,” it said.
One of the organization’s leaders, Fritznel Pierre, told Radio Magik 9 in an interview that the number of casualties was not exhaustive, as the area was difficult to access.
He reported that henchmen had hunted down old people and voodoo followers living in the Wharf Jeremie section of Cite Soleil between Friday evening and Saturday.
“Motorcycle taxi drivers who tried to flee with targeted people were also executed,” he said.
Voodoo was brought to Haiti by African slaves and is a mainstay of the country’s culture. It was banned during French colonial rule and only recognized as an official religion by the Haitian government in 2003.