health / Saturday, 30-Aug-2025

Support for Haiti needed now ‘more than ever’, Security Council hears | UN News

Peace and Security

Haiti is showing signs of progress on the political front despite serious setbacks in terms of security, the Special Representative and Head of the UN office in the country, BINUH, told the Security Council on Wednesday. 

Security Council-backed Multinational Security Support mission (MSS) and, in some cases, the Armed Forces of Haiti, has made efforts to respond to the surge in violence. 

The MSS is led by Kenya, and she welcomed the deployment of an additional 217 police officers from the country on 18 January. Furthermore, 150 Guatemalans and an advance team of eight 
Salvadorean troops have also arrived in Haiti.

UN operations affected

The worsening security crisis has significantly impacted United Nations operations,” she said.

“In response to the suspension of flights to Port-au-Prince and widespread violence, the UN decided to temporarily reduce its footprint in the capital, while continuing to provide lifesaving assistance.”

She stressed that the UN remains committed to scaling up its presence as soon as security conditions allow. 

She said the humanitarian crisis in Haiti has reached alarming levels. Over six million people, nearly half the population, requires assistance, with nearly four million targeted for aid. 

The number of internally displaced persons has tripled to over one million, and more than half are children. Some 48 per cent of people are facing food insecurity, with nearly two million in emergency conditions and 6,000 in catastrophic conditions.

She urged donors to support the 2025 Humanitarian Response Plan for Haiti, which calls for $908 million to address the suffering and support recovery.

Weapons influx continues

Ghada Waly, head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), also briefed the Council.

She told ambassadors that the ongoing violence and instability in Haiti is compounded by illicit arms flows, drug trafficking and other illicit markets, and underpinned by corruption and money laundering.

Despite the reinforcement of the arms embargo, weapons and ammunition trafficking continue to flow into Haiti and into the hands of gangs,” she said.

While the drug trade is key among illicit markets, others are also “booming”, such as wildlife crime.

She said there is growing evidence that several Haitian nationals are part of a wider criminal network connected to lucrative eel trafficking, operating in the country and beyond. 

“Some reports indicate that powerful political and economic figures in Haiti use the eel industry to launder drug profits,” she added.

Ms. Waly underscored the importance of enhancing Haiti’s capacities against trafficking, improving regional cooperation and information sharing, and strengthening the country’s institutions.

She also reaffirmed UNODC’s commitment to work with the Haitian authorities and partners to tackle the underlying structures of organized crime and corruption. 

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