Haiti unrest fuels fear, frustration in tight-knit Haitian diasporas | Armed Groups News

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Montreal, Canada ā Marjorie Villefranche has never experienced anything like it.
For the past six months, the head of Maison dāHaiti (Haiti House), a community centre in Montrealās St-Michel neighbourhood, has received a wave of unsolicited messages from Haitians, begging for help to leave the country.
āāGet us out of here please, we are starving, we are afraid, we are in the hands of mobs,āā Villefranche recalled of the messages that have poured in. āThat never happened before.ā
But this month, Haitiās years-long crisis reached a new peak of political instability and violence.
Powerful armed groups have maintained their grip on the capital of Port-au-Prince after the resignation of Prime Minister Ariel Henry last week and a shaky political transition is under way.
The attacks have paralysed Port-au-Prince, more than 360,000 people have been displaced, and the country faces a deepening hunger crisis.
For Haitians living outside of the Caribbean nation, the unrest has fuelled a sense of fear and anxiety over the safety of their loved ones back home. It has also spurred growing frustrations over their inability to get family members out of harmās way, as well as calls to action.
Villefranche told Al Jazeera that more than half of the staff members at Maison dāHaiti have close family in Haiti.
āTheyāre just on the phone with them all the time because they donāt know what will happen to them. Some of [the relatives], they cannot go out of the house, they donāt have water, they donāt have electricity. You risk your life to go and buy some food,ā she told Al Jazeera.
Meanwhile, the international airport in Port-au-Prince has been closed amid the violence and the Dominican Republic ā which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti ā has largely sealed its land border, too.
āItās impossible actually to get them out but this is what everyone will like,ā Villefranche said. āThey want a break from that suffering. Everyone [is] thinking, āCan I bring my family here, please?āā
The diaspora
Haitians have migrated to other parts of the Americas region and further afield for many decades.
Some left in search of better employment opportunities or education, while others were pushed out due to natural disasters, political instability and increasingly, violence wrought by armed groups.
Today, there are large Haitian communities in the Dominican Republic, Chile and Brazil, among other countries in Central and South America, as well as in Canada, which is home to nearly 180,000 people of Haitian descent.
But the largest Haitian diaspora is in the United States, where US Census figures showed that more than 1.1 million people identified as Haitian in 2022.
āWeāre all connected. I think that every Haitian immigrant is somewhat connected to Haitians in Haiti,ā said Tessa Petit, the executive director of the Florida Immigrant Coalition (FLIC), a coalition of dozens of community and advocacy groups in the southeastern US state.
Florida counts the largest Haitian community in the country, followed by New York City.
Like Villefranche in Canada, Petit said Haitians in Florida have strong ties to communities in Haiti ā and they have been watching the latest developments in Port-au-Prince with alarm over the past several weeks.
āThereās a stress because youāre sitting here, youāre in Miami, you feel powerless,ā Petit told Al Jazeera. āYou hope that youāre not going to get bad news, that itās not going to be your turn to lose a loved one.ā

Growing urgency
Petit said there is a growing sense of urgency among Haitians in the US that something must be done to stem the wave of deadly attacks in Haitiās capital.
Amid the violence, US President Joe Bidenās administration and other foreign governments that had previously backed Henry, Haitiās unelected prime minister, since he took office in 2021, withdrew their support for him.
They are now backing a political process that will see the establishment of a transitional presidential council, which in turn will choose a temporary replacement for Henry before Haitian elections can be held.
The United Nations has also supported a multinational security mission to help Haiti respond to the gangs but that proposal has been stalled.
The president of Kenya, which is expected to lead the deployment, said last week that the country would send āa reconnaissance mission as soon as a viable administration is in placeā to ensure that Kenyan security personnel āare adequately prepared and informed to respondā.
But Petit said people in Port-au-Prince cannot wait for such a mission to arrive. Instead, she urged the international community, including the US, to provide better equipment and training to the overwhelmed Haitian National Police to restore security.
āWhatās going to be left of the country if weāre waiting for a Kenyan police force?ā she said.Ā āThereās not going to be anything left to fight for.ā
āAll is not lostā
Emmanuela Douyon, an anticorruption activist who left Haiti in 2021 amid fears for her safety and is now based in the US city of Boston, echoed the need to act.
āItās really painful and Iām feeling a lot of emotions at the same time,ā she told Al Jazeera about what it has been like to watch the violence in Haiti unfold over the past weeks from afar.
She noted that this monthās crisis is not new, however, but the continuation of years of corruption by Haitian politicians and businessmen who have used armed groups to maintain power and further their economic interests.
āThe situation is extremely serious but all is not lost,ā said Douyon, who stressed that many Haitians can serve their country and help rebuild state institutions.
āBut on their own, without the support of the international community, without the support of international civil society groups, they wonāt manage itā in the face of armed gangs that increasingly want political power, she said.
Villefranche at Maison dāHaiti in Canada, also told Al Jazeera that there are many groups and people in Haiti who are well organised and have ideas about how to chart the countryās future.
But these Haitian voices often get excluded, Villefranche said, in favour of āthe same old actors who created the problemā in the first place.
āItās funny because in the Haitian spirit, weāre never discouraged. We always think that there will be a solution, so I think being in despair is not in our DNA. Even if itās terrible, we just hope that something better will come out of it.
āPeople are sad, they are angry, and I would say that a lot of them, their body is here but their heart is in Haiti ā because their family is there. So this is how we feel, I would say: a little bit empty,ā Villefranche added, her voice trailing off.
āBut still hoping that something will happen because there are a lot of possibilities in the country ā because there are a lot of people still living there and ready to do something.ā
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