Haiti gangs' US terrorism designation risks entrenching their powers
9/5/2025 6:36
The designation of
Haiti's major gangs as terrorists by Washington could risk
further entrenching their power by limiting financial and
humanitarian aid, NGOs focused on organized crime and human
rights have warned.
The United States last week designated Viv Ansanm, the armed
alliance that controls most of capital Port-au-Prince, and Gran
Grif, which operates in the breadbasket Artibonite region, as
terrorist groups, following similar measures made recently for
Latin American drug cartels.
The designation is intended to isolate the groups, denying
them access to financing from U.S. people or companies.
"Terrorist designations play a critical role in our fight
against these vicious groups and are an effective way to curtail
support for their terrorist activities," Secretary of State
Marco Rubio said at the time.
Analysts at the Global Initiative Against Transnational
Organized Crime said on Thursday that the designation could,
however, "inadvertently worsen the situation on the ground."
It said the move could threaten the activities of some NGOs
who engage with gangs to deliver aid to communities under gang
control - potentially cutting off aid and making populations
even more dependent on the armed groups. International
businesses could also leave Haiti to avoid the risk of falling
foul of U.S. law, it added.
Haiti's Center for Analysis and Research for Human Rights
earlier this week raised similar doubts, saying the move could
hurt NGOs working with Haiti's most vulnerable in
gang-controlled areas, already hit by frozen U.S. aid funding.
"If drastic and appropriate measures are not taken to
contain the root of the problem (such as) arms trafficking from
the United States and across the Haitian-Dominican border, then
gang members, most of whom are social victims, could become even
more radicalized," it said in its report.
An alliance of gangs has been using brutal tactics to grow
its power since the 2021 assassination of Haiti's last
president.
Pierre Esperance, who heads Haiti's National Network for the
Defense of Human Rights, said in an interview on Tuesday that
his group had long considered the gangs as terrorists.
"During 2024 they started setting people on fire while they
were in their homes, they stopped them from running out and
burnt them, rapes continued, kidnappings... These are terrorist
acts," he said.
In a recent report, Haiti-focused security adviser Halo
Solutions Firm said while nuanced enforcement could cripple gang
financing, "a policy that does not distinguish between corrupt
enablers and extorted survivors will risk collapsing the
commercial backbone of the country."
Haiti's central bank on Wednesday warned lenders, exchange
bureaus and payment services to be vigilant for exposure to
operations financing terrorist groups.
More than 1,600 people were killed in violent clashes in the
first three months of this year while over 1 million are
internally displaced, according to U.N. estimates, with local
security services backed by limited international support.
|