The crisis in Haiti continues to worsen with deadly violence on the rise and growing humanitarian concerns. There are also real fears that the capital Port-au-Prince is descending into anarchy. Is there any hope for a political solution?
Joining the discussion:
- Albert DeCady is a former executive director with the United Front of the Haitian Diaspora.
- Jemima Pierre is a Haitian-American scholar and a professor at the University of British Columbia.
- Kim Ives is English Editor with the Haiti Liberte newspaper.
- Firmin Backer is the co-founder and president of the Haiti Renewal Alliance.
Many are smuggled in via Haiti, which is not only a destination country for arms, but exports them to the rest of the region https://t.co/iSLHo4nRCY
Image: Reuters pic.twitter.com/ct3kLotqEt
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) October 7, 2023
Two in three children in Haiti require humanitarian aid.
Amid years of horrific violence and new levels of human rights abuses, critical services are collapsing.
Children must be protected. Here's what UNICEF is doing. https://t.co/YIJunblcJN pic.twitter.com/hiGr5OUvkO
— UNICEF (@UNICEF) March 14, 2024