[HAITI] Un rituel vaudou tourne mal : 184 MORTS
7 messages
Mise à jour: il y a 4 mois
RoyDesSinges5
il y a 4 mois
Oui c'est ma faute je voulais faire un rituel pour faire apparaître une succube mais ça a merdé désolé
Queensesis
il y a 4 mois
Oui c'est ma faute je voulais faire un rituel pour faire apparaître une succube mais ça a merdé désolé
Ok
suceurdetrans3
il y a 4 mois
ça arrive
ArchibaldTuttle
il y a 4 mois
Si j'ai bien compris, c'est les gangs de Keyoux Deter HAitiens (genre BBQ ) qui s'en sont pris aux "boomers" de leur Iles :
Ils on carrement liquide tout les vieux aux cheveux grisonnants qu'ils on croise pour un sombre "qui-proquo" !!
wsj.com/world/americas/haiti-gangs-kill-more-than-180-mostly-elderly-people-in-capital-a88d9e10
Haiti Gangs Kill More Than 180 Mostly Elderly People in Capital
Warlord ordered slaying of slum residents he suspected of sickening his son through witchcraft, say the U.N. and rights groups
By Kejal Vyas
The violence in Port-au-Prince over the weekend highlights the chaos that has engulfed Haiti, where a U.S.-backed, Kenyan-led multinational police force deployed earlier this year has struggled to fight back gangs that control most of the Caribbean nation's capital.
Warlords have ransacked everything from police stations to hospitals while the country's fragile government has been mired in infighting. The World Food Program estimates that half of Haiti's 12 million people face acute hunger.
Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for the U.N. secretary-general, said 127 of the 184 people killed in the latest attacks were elderly men and women. About 5,000 people have been killed by gang violence in Haiti in 2024, according to the U.N.
Haiti's interim Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé called the killings “a barbaric act of unbearable cruelty,” and pledged to deploy police against the gang. “A red line has been crossed, and the state will mobilize all its forces to track down and destroy these criminals,” Fils-Aimé said.
With the government in disarray, police have faced mass desertions. Security analysts and U.N. officials say crime bosses like Felix have thrived in the power vacuum, gobbling up territory around Port-au-Prince's main shipping and fuel terminals to facilitate their main businesses, which include extortion, kidnappings and drug and weapons smuggling. Rights organizations accuse gangs of rampant killings, rape and recruiting children as foot soldiers to assert their control over the city's sprawling slums.
The latest episode of violence took place in the Jeremie Wharf shantytown controlled by Felix's group over Friday and Saturday. Felix's gang encircled the neighborhood as they hunted for residents over the age of 60 and suspected practitioners of witchcraft, rights groups said, adding that younger residents, too, were killed trying to save neighbors.
It wasn't immediately clear why the gang targeted the elderly. Gang members mutilated and burned bodies in the streets, the National Human Rights Defense Network said, warning that the death toll is likely to rise.
Felix couldn't be reached for comment. His gang was blamed for killing 12 elderly women on charges of witchcraft in June 2021, the defense network said.
Haiti has been nominally ruled by a transitional governing council since April, after gangs broke open prisons, and attacked government buildings and the international airport in an uprising that forced the resignation of former Prime Minister Ariel Henry.
The council, made up of representatives from Haitian political parties and civil society organizations, then fired Henry's successor Garry Conille last month for failing to curb the spiraling gang violence. Now led by Fils-Aimé, a businessman, the interim government has a mandate to organize democratic elections by February 2026, which human-rights activists say increasingly looks unlikely as the conflict deepens.
The U.N. “calls on all Haitian stakeholders to accelerate progress in the political transition,” Dujarric said.
Two years ago, Felix was banned by the government of neighboring Dominican Republic from entering the country for being part of a broad gang confederation that today controls more than 85% of Haiti's capital, choking off ports as well as food and fuel distribution for much of the country.
In June, a Kenya-led multinational police force was deployed to help Haitian authorities regain territory from gangs but has since made few advances amid chronic shortages of funding and personnel. A little more than 400 of the 2,500 foreign officers pledged to the mission have been deployed.
Haiti's beleaguered interim government in September requested that the U.N. take over the police force and transform it into a peacekeeping mission in a bid to resolve funding and supply issues. The petition was supported by the U.S. and its allies but has been opposed by U.N. Security Council members China and Russia, who cite a long history of failed peacekeeping missions to Haiti.
Human Rights Watch on Monday called on the U.N. to act faster to ensure security in Haiti as gang violence becomes increasingly brutal. The New York-based advocacy group said countries around the region need to do more to guarantee financing and training for a security mission and must work to curb the flow of weapons that are trafficked in primarily from the U.S. to fuel the conflict in Haiti.
“Haitians cannot wait-millions of lives depend on urgent and decisive international action,” the group said.
Queensesis
il y a 4 mois