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News / Nation & World

Inmates escape from Haiti prison north of the capital in the third jail break in months

By Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald
Published: August 16, 2024, 3:32pm

Detainees have escaped from another prison in Haiti. The latest prison break occurred north of the capital in the city of St. Marc, where the local business community has been calling for police reinforcement for days against ruthless gangs making inroads into the city.

A notice informing the public of the prison break was issued by the local St. Marc police station. It asks the public to report to the police any suspicious persons resembling escaped detainees and said the local police “are mobilized to search for the escapees of” Friday.

Images of videos show detainees climbing over a wall and others walking through a street accompanied by armed gang members. There was also a cloud of black smoke billowing from the structure. It remains unclear how many prisoners escaped and whether the incident is the result of a gang attack or an internal security breach. An attempt to reach the spokesman for the Haiti National Police has so far been unsuccessful.

This is the third prison break in Haiti in five months. In early March, gangs raided the country’s two largest prisons, the National Penitentiary and the civil prison in Croix-des-Bouquets, leading to the escape of more than 4,000 detainees. Among the escapees were dangerous criminals including gang leaders, murderers and people indicted in the 2021 assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.

“Up to now the police have not said how many of them have been caught,” said Marie Yolene Gilles, a human rights advocate who closely monitors Haiti’s prisoners and confirmed the St. Marc escapes.

Gilles said she was still trying to gather details, but she isn’t surprised. “Once one prison falls, others fall; it’s like a domino effect,” she said.

As of July, the St. Marc prison held about 500 inmates, said Gilles, who runs the Fondasyon Je Klere/Eyes Wide Open Foundation. Last month, the prison administration relocated more than 150 inmates from a prison in the city of Carrefour, south of Port-au-Prince, after armed gangs attacked the main police station.

Armed groups in Haiti have continued to move into cities despite the arrival of 400 Kenyan police officers, who began deploying in June to lead as part of a multinational security mission. On Thursday night, violence erupted in the Solino neighborhood of the capital not far from the presidential palace. Haiti National Police on Thursday attempted to arrest one of the gang leaders who escaped in the March prison break. There are unconfirmed reports of deaths in both incidents, including police officers.

As of June 30, there were 7,523 people being held in Haiti’s prisons, according to the United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti. Of these, 84% were in pre-trial detention, meaning they had never seen a judge, and the cell occupancy rate was 295% above capacity.

Haiti has one of the region’s most troubled prison systems. Prisons are not only overcrowded and vulnerable to security breaches, but inmates suffer from food shortages, poor hygiene and illnesses, including a rise in HIV/AIDS and malnutrition. The poor conditions regularly lead to deaths.

Between April 1 and June 30, 78 inmates died, the U.N. said, “most of them due to a lack of care… insufficient food and lack of access to drinking water.” This week, three more deaths were added to the toll when detainees at the Civil Prison of Jacmel reportedly died from anemia.

At the CERMICOL juvenile detention center in Delmas, where women are currently being held after their prison in Cabaret was overtaken by armed gangs, the number of detainees is currently 400% over capacity. The prison was built to hold just 60 inmates, human rights advocates say.

The U.N. also said in its report that between April 1 and June 30, at least 1,379 people were killed or injured and another 428 kidnapped in Haiti, where nearly 600,000 people remain displaced by armed gangs. Though the numbers represent a 44% drop in killings and gunshot wounds and a 2% drop in kidnappings compared to the previous quarter, attacks by armed groups persist, the U.N.said. In recent weeks, several communities on the borders of Port-au-Prince have come under increasing attacks by armed gangs.

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