Overview:
Ten days after gangs attacked Kenscoff’s Belot and Godet communities, killing 50 and displacing 3,000, survivors stay in dire situations.
PORT-AU-PRINCE — 1000’s of residents from Kenscoff’s Belot and Godet communities are in limbo after a violent gang assault on Jan. 28 left 50 useless, 11 injured, and three,000 displaced, together with 721 youngsters.
Greater than Ten days after the assault, many survivors stay in makeshift shelters, together with Furcy Nationwide College, Lycée Jean Paul II, and the Kenscoff mayor’s workplace, which now homes 223 households.
An evening of terror in Belot and Godet
The assault noticed closely armed gang members storm houses, opening hearth on civilians earlier than setting homes ablaze. A complete household of eight was murdered, whereas others managed to flee into the mountains or search refuge in Pétion-Ville’s public squares.
Regardless of prior safety measures by native authorities, gangs managed to grab management of key routes, significantly an alternate passage connecting the West and Southeast departments—a vital lifeline for vacationers avoiding gang-controlled Nationwide Highway #2 by way of Martissant and Carrefour.
Gangs goal Kenscoff’s strategic location
Positioned lower than eight miles from Pétion-Ville, Kenscoff’s mountainous terrain has traditionally served as a protected various route for residents and merchants. Nevertheless, gangs have intensified efforts to regulate the realm, reducing off yet one more vital passage for these searching for to flee violence in Port-au-Prince.
Here’s a show of photographs that supply a glimpse into the each day lives of 1000’s of displaced residents following the January 28 assault
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


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