Haitian Crisis - Organized Crime, Cannibalism, Election Problems And Foreign Interventions

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Probably everyone already knows this, but the crisis of Haiti is that you can't fix the country with most of the current population, and it's not even worth the effort as there are many other more functional nations out there in the region.

The only real political solution for Haiti today is to turn it into a containment zone and deflate its fertility rates so you won't have floods of Haitians constantly flooding into other countries.
 
I meant to post these last week, but forgot.

Drone Strike in Haiti Kills 8 Children at a Birthday Party
New York Times (archive.ph)
By Frances Robles
2025-09-24 03:40:30GMT
haiti01.webp
Children playing in the Simon Pelé area of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where the drone strike took place on Saturday.Credit...Odelyn Joseph/Associated Press

Eleven civilians, including eight children, were killed on Saturday in Haiti’s capital when drones aimed at a gang leader struck a birthday party where community members had gathered, a human rights group said.

In March, the authorities in Haiti hired foreign military contractors to operate armed drones to target gangs that terrorize the capital, Port-au-Prince. The contractors work for a company owned by Erik Prince, a prominent supporter of President Trump.

Experts have warned that the strikes were not only a violation of international law, because there is no officially declared armed conflict in the country, but also bound to inflict collateral damage in densely populated urban areas where gang members operate.

While two police officers were accidentally killed by a drone last month and two civilian adults died in drone strikes in June, Saturday’s episode was believed to be the first time children were among the victims.

Two “kamikaze” drones were deployed Saturday evening in Simon Pelé, a gang-controlled area in Cité Soleil, a large, impoverished neighborhood near Port-au-Prince’s airport, according to the National Human Rights Defense Network.

The target was Albert Steevenson, a gang leader also known as Djouma, who was celebrating his birthday and distributing gifts to children, the human rights group said. Mr. Steevenson escaped unscathed.

The first drone killed eight children, ages 2 to 10, and three adults. Six more children were injured, the human rights group said. All of them were civilians.

A second drone fell near the gang’s headquarters, killing four gang members and injuring seven others, said Pierre Espérance, executive director of the National Human Rights Defense Network.

A pregnant woman was among the dead, according to a person familiar with the case who was not authorized to speak publicly.

Jimmy Chérizier, a gang leader known as Barbecue, blamed the errant drone strike on the administration of Alix Didier Fils-Aimé, the prime minister who hired the contractors to take on gangs. He denied reports that gang members had been killed, saying only civilians had died.

He said 150 to 200 children had gathered in a park to receive cash gifts for Mr. Steevenson’s birthday.

“No armed person died, but many people in the civilian population are victims,” Mr. Chérizier said in a video posted on YouTube, where he showed gruesome photos of the dead children.

“The government of Fils-Aimé continues to massacre people in working-class neighborhoods,” he said.

Witnesses told The Associated Press that children had been left mangled.

Michelin Florville told the news agency the explosion had killed two of his grandchildren, ages 3 and 7, and his 32-year-old son.

“People were running right and left,” he was quoted saying.

Haitian gangs are known to use civilians as a shield to protect themselves from drones. Members of the task force operating the drones knew that it was Mr. Steevenson’s birthday and that civilians would be present, according to two people familiar with the episode who were not authorized to speak publicly.

A Haitian National Police spokesman declined to comment. Mr. Fils-Aimé’s office also declined to comment, citing an active investigation. A spokeswoman for the presidential council did not respond to a request for more information.

Mr. Prince, the American military defense contractor, did not respond to requests for comment. It was unclear whether his contractors or the Haitian police were responsible for Saturday’s attack.

Mr. Espérance said there was no accountability for civilians killed in drone strikes and added that while many gang members had been killed, no leaders had been hit.

“On the contrary, these leaders have grown more at ease and increasingly arrogant, even moving openly in convoys,” Mr. Espérance said.

Mr. Espérance said 11 civilians were killed in a different drone strike on Sept. 6 in downtown Port-au-Prince.

Still, many Haitians view the drone strikes as a much-needed last resort for a nation that is plagued by violence and feels abandoned by the international community.

The U.N. mandate for a multinational security force led by Kenya, which is widely viewed as a failure, expires next week, and that could lead to the mission’s departure from Haiti.

The United States and Panama have proposed a larger gang suppression force with at least 5,500 people, more than five times the size of the current deployment.

Despite the contributions of Kenya and other countries, “the mission currently lacks the mandate and the resources necessary to address the mounting scale of the challenge,” Christopher Landau, the U.S. deputy secretary of state, said on Monday in New York after meeting with Kenya’s president.

The U.N. Security Council is expected to vote soon on the proposal, but Russia and China, which have veto power, have expressed reservations.

Haiti spiraled into lawlessness after the 2021 assassination of its president, Jovenel Moïse.

Gangs control principal roads in and out of the capital, and have launched major offensives against neighborhoods and police stations, hospitals and other buildings. Nearly 1.3 million people have fled their homes because of the violence in recent years, and nearly 4,000 people were killed in the first six months of the year.
ICE agents arrest one of Haiti’s most powerful and wealthy businessmen on US soil
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Dánica Coto
2025-09-23 22:56:57GMT
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Federal immigration agents have arrested Dimitri Vorbe, one of Haiti’s most powerful businessmen and the latest elite figure from the troubled Caribbean country to be detained on U.S. soil.

Vorbe was in custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Tuesday, according to online records. He was being held at Krome North Service Processing Center in Miami.

It wasn’t immediately clear why Vorbe was arrested or if he faces any charges. A search for court records in Florida on Tuesday showed no formal charges. An ICE spokesperson did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

His arrest comes two months after ICE agents in Florida arrested Réginald Boulos, a businessman, doctor and former Haitian presidential hopeful. Authorities have accused Boulos of supporting violent gangs in Haiti that the U.S. government has deemed terrorist groups.

“With the arrests of Boulos and Vorbe, you are seeing a strata of Haitian society touched in their places of exile,” said Michael Deibert, author of “Notes From the Last Testament: The Struggle for Haiti,” and “Haiti Will Not Perish: A Recent History.”

“A message is being sent to the upper echelon of Haiti’s political and economic elite that they’re not untouchable anymore,” he said.

A wealthy scion
Vorbe and his family own Société Générale d’Énergie S.A, a private power company that was one of the biggest suppliers of electricity to Haiti’s state-owned company.

The Vorbe family also was known for securing major government construction projects for the building of roads and other infrastructure under former President René Préval.

“They were getting lots of money from the state,” said Jake Johnston, international research director at the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research. “Both Boulos and Dimitri Vorbe were the two members of the elite, the oligarchs that Jovenel went after.”

In 2020, the administration of slain former President Jovenel Moïse seized Vorbe’s power company following accusations of corruption.

“There is not much love lost in Haiti either for Dimitri Vorbe or Réginald Boulos, or many of the elite families,” Johnston said of the arrests. “Many people will cheer it in a country with a broken judicial system as it’s some sliver of accountability, (but) we don’t know what any of this is for. … How does this all fit together into a strategy that actually benefits Haiti?”

A US crackdown
Vorbe was taken into custody a day after the U.S. government designated two former Haitian public officials who were close to the Vorbe family for involvement in “significant corruption” while in office.

The designation against Arnel Belizaire, a former member of Haiti’s Chamber of Deputies, and Antonio Cheramy, a former senator, means that they and their immediate family are “generally ineligible” to enter the U.S.

“The U.S. government will remain relentless in pursuing those supporting terrorist gangs through indictments, arrests, sanctions, arms seizures and other immigration restrictions,” Christopher Landau, deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of State, said Monday.

The Vorbe family is not only economically powerful, but politically as well.

Joel “Pacha” Vorbe is a member of the powerful Fanmi Lavalas political party, while an attorney for the Vorbe’s power company was appointed minister of justice in recent years. He later resigned and was sanctioned by Canada’s government.

Some elite families in Haiti have long been accused of financing and working with gangs that control 90% of the capital Port-au-Prince, with gang violence surging in recent years.
US accuses a powerful Haitian businessman detained by ICE of ties to violent gangs
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Dánica Coto
2025-09-24 21:58:09GMT
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Immigration agents in the United States arrested Haitian businessman Dimitri Vorbe because of his alleged ties to violent gangs in his troubled Caribbean country, the U.S. State Department said Wednesday.

Vorbe was arrested Tuesday and placed in the custody of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the Miami area.

Officials determined that Vorbe “engaged in a campaign of violence and gang support that contributed to Haiti’s destabilization,” the U.S. Embassy in Haiti said in a social media post, adding that his activities in the U.S. could harm Washington’s foreign policy.

The post included a video with a mugshot of Vorbe and the word “detained” in red capital letters emblazoned over his face. It also showed him standing facing a camera flanked by two unidentified officials in flak jackets who were grabbing his right shoulder and left arm with their backs to the camera.

Vorbe comes from a powerful family that owned a private power company that supplied electricity in Haiti and obtained lucrative government contracts for key construction projects.

Gangs and Haiti’s elite
Vorbe is the second person from Haiti’s elite to be arrested on U.S. soil in the past two months.

In July, U.S. immigration officials arrested Pierre Réginald Boulos, a businessman, doctor and former Haitian presidential hopeful. He remains detained at Krome North Service Processing Center near Miami, along with Vorbe.

Authorities have accused Boulos of supporting violent gangs in Haiti that the U.S. government has deemed terrorist groups.

It was not immediately clear if Boulos or Vorbe have been charged. A search for court records shows no formal charges.

Some of Haiti’s elite have long been accused of financing and supporting powerful gangs that control up to 90% of the capital, Port-au-Prince, with violence surging in recent months.

A U.N.-backed mission led by Kenyan officers supporting Haiti’s National Police has struggled to quell gang violence as it remains understaffed and underfunded.

The U.N.-backed mission that began last year has less than 1,000 personnel, far below the 2,500 envisioned, and some $112 million in its trust fund — about 14% of the estimated $800 million needed a year.

Haiti on UN agenda
Vorbe’s arrest comes as Haiti’s crisis dominates some speeches and conversations at the U.N. General Assembly this week.

Kenyan President William Ruto said Monday that the biggest impediments to the current mission that ends next week were logistics, transport and support.

While he commended the U.S. government for giving the mission vehicles, he noted that “most of them were second-hand, and they broke down and put our people in grave danger when it happened in hostile areas.”

Ruto said he supports a successor mission.

“Kenya believes that it is the right thing to do,” he said. “We need a better mandate, a much more robust mandate to be able to deal with the gangs and the situation on the ground.”

The U.S. and Panama have urged the U.N. Security Council to authorize a new force of 5,550 in Haiti with the power to detain suspected gang members.

On Wednesday, Luis Abinader, president of the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, said the only way forward for Haiti is “coherent and sustained international action.”

He said he backs the proposal for the so-called gang-suppression force.

“The multidimensional crisis in Haiti represents a serious threat to peace and security for the Dominican Republic and the entire region,” Abinader said.
One of Haiti’s leaders says his country is at war with gangs and asks the world for help
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Cristiana Mesquita and Dánica Coto
2025-09-26 00:40:14GMT
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — One of Haiti’s leaders on Thursday asked the world to help his troubled Caribbean country fight what he characterized as a war against relentless gang violence and widespread hunger.

Laurent Saint-Cyr, head of Haiti’s transitional presidential council, addressed the U.N. General Assembly in New York, saying that immediate action was needed because people were dying daily across Haiti.

“Just a four-hour plane ride from here, a human tragedy is unfolding,” he said. “Every day, innocent lives are extinguished. ... Entire neighborhoods are disappearing.”’

“It’s important to say this: Haiti is experiencing war, a war between criminals that want to impose violence as a social order and an armed population that is fighting for human dignity and freedom,” Saint-Cyr said.

Violence between the country’s gangs and police, as well as with vigilante groups, has left more than 3,100 people dead from January to June, with another 1,189 injured, according to the U.N.

The mayhem has displaced more than 1.3 million people across Haiti in recent years, while more than half of Haiti’s nearly 12 million inhabitants were expected to experience severe hunger through through the first half of the year.

The refugees settle where they can, such as the shelter found by Kettia Jean Charles and her family in the Delmas 31 low-income area of the capital, Port-au-Prince. No longer as safe as it once was, it’s still a refuge compared to the Solino neighborhood where she ran a beauty salon — now a ghost town after gangsters drove out most remaining locals in November.

“I used to sleep in a bed, had my own business, and my children went to school. Now, I am living this catastrophic life,” Charles said.

Charles, 34, is at least seven months pregnant — she’s not sure exactly how many weeks — and lives with her husband and three children in a home made of four plastic sheets with a tarp for a roof. She gets some help from relatives nearby and the family fights for the scraps of food provided at the shelter.

“I am asking for help so I can get out of this situation,” Charles said as she wiped away tears. “Since I have come here, it has been very humiliating because I have no money, so I have to beg.”

Last year, a U.N.-backed mission led by Kenyan police officers launched operations in Haiti meant to help an understaffed and underfunded local police department fight back against the gangs.

But more than a year has passed, and the mission still has less than 1,000 personnel, far below the 2,500 envisioned, and some $112 million in its trust fund — about 14% of the estimated $800 million needed a year.

The U.S. and Panama have urged the U.N. Security Council to authorize a new force of 5,550 in Haiti, a proposal backed by Saint-Cyr.

“It is crucial to mobilize a strong force with a clear mandate and with adequate material, logistical and financial resources,” he said.

In the once-thriving neighborhood of Solino, which had several shops, businesses and even a health clinic, the gangs took everything they could, including electrical wiring, toilets and light fixtures. Nearly every home now has charred and bullet-riddled walls.

“All I dream about now is leaving this camp so that my children can go to school and contribute to society,” Charles said.
 
Probably everyone already knows this, but the crisis of Haiti is that you can't fix the country with most of the current population, and it's not even worth the effort as there are many other more functional nations out there in the region.

The only real political solution for Haiti today is to turn it into a containment zone and deflate its fertility rates so you won't have floods of Haitians constantly flooding into other countries.
Haiti descends into chaos every few years and this is the 2nd or 3rd haitian tussle in the 2020s with president moise being assassinated in 2021. there is no solution but to replace the haitians with someome else.
 
It's a dark as fuck question to entertain, but say if Haiti was subjected to a mass genocide of it's population, would anyone actually care at this point?
 
So the UN are going in again. Wonder what nation's going to drink from that poisoned chalice this time. Whoever it is, I'm sure they'll bring just as much crime, rape, disease and murder as last time before once again leaving the country just as fucked, but with some extra half-breed kids abandoned in those garbage slums.
If they want to actually stop the gangs (they don't really, just want them under control enough to be good for themselves rather than destroying the entire nation) then they'd bring in foreign volunteers/mercs like the Congolese back in the 60s. Getting a foreign nation to come and do police work is almost never going to work, because why would they take risks and actually be proactive in eliminating the enemy when that is political suicide. The Kenyans are mad about their dumbass deployment, who is going to look at the failures there and say "Yes, let's get involved in that"?
The Caribbean should be a damn paradise, instead it's just a series of increasingly disastrous niggerhells. I hate it.
 
Why not deport all the jeets in America to Haiti?
I think you’d accidentally breed a race of hideous Jeetnigs with the low, animal cunning and cockroach like tendencies of your average Jeet, with the physical strength and low impulse control of a Haitian.

It’s all fun and games and gangs fighting wars to control the main shitting street while they’re in Haiti, but just wait till a future Dem administration starts importing jeetnigs to America.

Do NOT redeem!!!
 
I think you’d accidentally breed a race of hideous Jeetnigs with the low, animal cunning and cockroach like tendencies of your average Jeet, with the physical strength and low impulse control of a Haitian.

It’s all fun and games and gangs fighting wars to control the main shitting street while they’re in Haiti, but just wait till a future Dem administration starts importing jeetnigs to America.

Do NOT redeem!!!

That's just a gypsy on steroids.

Dimitri Vorbe.... I wonder, is he a Haitian or a (((Haitian))).

Also kek at drone striking the gang leader at his children gift event and not even killing him. 10/10 MIC victory.
 
Why not deport all the jeets in America to Haiti?
It's a cruel thing to do to the Domican's who run a quite peaceful and succesful country on the other half of the island. Largely by keeping the fucking Haitians on their own fucking side. Dumping pollution like jeets on them seems cruel and barbaric.
 
It's a cruel thing to do to the Domican's who run a quite peaceful and succesful country on the other half of the island. Largely by keeping the fucking Haitians on their own fucking side. Dumping pollution like jeets on them seems cruel and barbaric.

It would seem to be a far better idea to give some guns and pickup trucks to all the Haitians in America, and sail them all back, so they can take their natural place as ruling class niggers ruling over slightly less civilized niggers.

If there ever are some based Chinese scientists who want to do a study on race and intelligence/societal collapse, I’d suggest a trip to Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

Do some genetic testing of the population, and I’m pretty sure you’ll find a far higher incidence of European admixture in the DR than in Haiti, and the results speak for themselves.

DR: 80% Nig 20% white DNA: Functional state. Third world shithole, but one of the better ones.

Haiti: 97% Nig 3% white DNA: LITTERAL HELL ON EARTH. Canibalism, rape gangs roaming the streets. Environmental disaster. Government is divided among street gang led by people with names like Barbecue and Messieur Chop Chop.

I rest my case.
 
It would seem to be a far better idea to give some guns and pickup trucks to all the Haitians in America, and sail them all back, so they can take their natural place as ruling class niggers ruling over slightly less civilized niggers.

If there ever are some based Chinese scientists who want to do a study on race and intelligence/societal collapse, I’d suggest a trip to Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

Do some genetic testing of the population, and I’m pretty sure you’ll find a far higher incidence of European admixture in the DR than in Haiti, and the results speak for themselves.

DR: 80% Nig 20% white DNA: Functional state. Third world shithole, but one of the better ones.

Haiti: 97% Nig 3% white DNA: LITTERAL HELL ON EARTH. Canibalism, rape gangs roaming the streets. Environmental disaster. Government is divided among street gang led by people with names like Barbecue and Messieur Chop Chop.

I rest my case.

Somehow there are nigger countries that do better than Haiti. Not all, but some Africans are better off, and by definition they are 100% nig.

So therefore there must be something in Haiti that makes them act more retarded that even pureblood niggers. Negative selection pressures that weren't present in Africa as a general rule? Or were the Haitian starting gene stock made by boating niggers there that were more violent and retarded than regular niggers?
 
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So therefore there must be something in Haiti that makes them act more retarded that even pureblood niggers. Negative selection pressures that weren't present in Africa as a general rule? Or were the Haitian starting gene stock made by boating niggers there that were more violent and retarded than regular niggers?
It can be traced back to the nigger who declared himself first Emperor of Haiti and killed all the whites after couping the mulatto revolutionary leader and killing him, now combine this with diplomatic isolation because you killed yti, Nguema-tier dictator after another, and you have half an island that is in constant chaos. Me personally? If I had a band of 5,000 soldiers, I'd storm the island, coup the local government, suspend habeus corpus and start rounding up the gangsters and executing them in the streets, and try to turn Haiti into an actual functional state by seizing all the wealth the gangsters inevitably have and using it to setup actual basic utilities.
Now that I think about, Haiti is a playing field for any aspiring social scientists to see if they can unfuck the most fucked societies on Earth.
 
Haiti descends into chaos every few years and this is the 2nd or 3rd haitian tussle in the 2020s with president moise being assassinated in 2021. there is no solution but to replace the haitians with someome else.
Dominicans. They hate niggers with a passion because they’re the whitest niggers on the planet and want to be white.
 
It can be traced back to the nigger who declared himself first Emperor of Haiti and killed all the whites after couping the mulatto revolutionary leader and killing him, now combine this with diplomatic isolation because you killed yti, Nguema-tier dictator after another, and you have half an island that is in constant chaos. Me personally? If I had a band of 5,000 soldiers, I'd storm the island, coup the local government, suspend habeus corpus and start rounding up the gangsters and executing them in the streets, and try to turn Haiti into an actual functional state by seizing all the wealth the gangsters inevitably have and using it to setup actual basic utilities.
Now that I think about, Haiti is a playing field for any aspiring social scientists to see if they can unfuck the most fucked societies on Earth.

There's no curing Haiti other than cutting off any and all aide, containing any attempts to flee and letting the Dominican Republic annex it within a couple years once their numbers have been reduced to a manageable number.
 
Somehow there are nigger countries that do better than Haiti. Not all, but some Africans are better off, and by definition they are 100% nig.
How many of those countries have whites, Asians and jews running things behind the scenes, or at least pushing political candidates that are less retarded?

Also, some African countries have tribes with higher IQs than their surrounding tribes, like the Igbo in Nigeria. Successful Nigerian immigrants in the US are usually Igbo. Another example is the Tutsi in Rwanda, who are much more civilized and governable than the Hutus.

Haiti blacks are the loser blacks from Senegal and Ghana who got sold by other tribes. They're dumb savages even by African standards.
 
How many of those countries have whites, Asians and jews running things behind the scenes, or at least pushing political candidates that are less retarded?

Also, some African countries have tribes with higher IQs than their surrounding tribes, like the Igbo in Nigeria. Successful Nigerian immigrants in the US are usually Igbo. Another example is the Tutsi in Rwanda, who are much more civilized and governable than the Hutus.

Haiti blacks are the loser blacks from Senegal and Ghana who got sold by other tribes. They're dumb savages even by African standards.
(((Gilbert Bigio))) is Haiti’s first/only billionaire and also happens to be funding the gang war right now.
 
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