US Marines exchange fire with Haiti gangs

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US Marines exchange fire with Haiti gangs

The gunmen targeted troops guarding the US Embassy, according to a military spokesman

US Marines guarding the embassy in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince, engaged in a shootout with suspected gang members last week, a military spokesman has said.

The Caribbean nation of almost 12 million has been gripped by violence since the assassination of President Jovenel Moise in 2021, with heavily armed criminal groups exploiting the power vacuum to increase their influence in Port-au-Prince and other areas. Haiti has been in a state of emergency for over a year.

The Marines returned fire after being targeted by suspected gang members late Thursday, US Marine spokesman Captain Steven J. Keenan said in a statement on Sunday.

There were no injuries among the US servicemen as a result of the incident, Keenan added.

The US State Department ordered nonessential US government employees and their families to leave Haiti in July 2023. It currently has a ‘Level 4: Do Not Travel’ warning for the country, citing the risk of kidnapping, crime, terrorist activity, and civil unrest.

In June, the head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, Ghada Fathi Waly, said the gangs had “approximately 90% of Port-au-Prince… under their grip,” while expanding their attacks to other areas that were previously peaceful. Control over key trade routes by criminal groups has crippled legal commerce, driving up the cost of essential goods such as cooking fuel and rice, Waly added.

According to UN data, at least 5,600 people were killed in gang-related incidents in Haiti in 2024, with 1.3 million across the country being displaced due to the crisis.

A Kenyan-led, UN-supported mission, which arrived in Haiti in 2024 to help curb the violence, was able to free the presidential palace in the capital and unblock several key roads, but could not achieve further progress due to a reported lack of personnel and equipment. Only around 40% of the planned 2,500 troops were deployed, according to AP.


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Last month, the UN Security Council decided to reorganize the mission into the Gang Suppression Force, to be composed of 5,500 soldiers and police officers.

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