News
| Sep 27, 2022

Gang blockade cripples Haiti fuel supplies, hospitals prepare to close

/ Our Today

administrator
Reading Time: 2 minutes
A man walks between road blocks set up by gangs after they waged intense gun battles, shuttering main avenues and a municipal market in the downtown area of the capital, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti July 27, 2022. (File Photo: REUTERS/Ralph Tedy Erol)

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters)

A gang blockade of Haiti’s principal fuel terminal has crippled day-to-day activities in the Caribbean nation and now threatens to force the closure of hospitals that rely on diesel generators for electricity.

Port-au-Prince gangs in a brazen move this month dug trenches and littered shipping containers at entrances to the Varreux terminal to protest a September 11 announcement that the government would cut fuel subsidies due to their high cost.

“Some hospitals are unable to admit new patients and are preparing to close,” wrote United Nations children’s agency UNICEF in a statement on Monday, adding that three quarters of major hospitals were affected by the shortages.

“Providing sterile conditions for medical interventions is becoming more challenging and conserving vaccines due to the disruption to cold-chain facilities has become problematic.”

ELECTRICITY SUPPLY UNSTEADY

Due to a lack of power, radio station Magik 9 on Tuesday had to halt its morning programming as it was conducting interviews regarding the critical situation created by fuel shortages, one of the station’s directors wrote on Twitter.

Electricity supply from Haiti’s grid is so unsteady that most businesses and offices cannot maintain operations without power provided by diesel generators.

Around 30 per cent of antennas operated by Digicel, Haiti’s largest mobile phone provider, were out of fuel, Digicel Chairman Maarten Boute wrote on Twitter on Tuesday.

Tanker trucks are being filled with fuel at the Varreux fuel terminal for distribution after a group of Haitian gangs temporarily lifted a blockade leading to shortages, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti November 13, 2021. (File Photo: REUTERS/Ralph Tedy Erol)

The plan to hike fuel prices unleashed anger among Haitians already struggling with soaring prices, triggering protests and street violence that devolved into looting.

A World Food Programme official on Monday said UN agencies and non-profit organisations lost some US$6 million worth of relief supplies during the violence.

Haiti’s gang violence has accelerated since last year’s assassination of President Jovenel Moise, with kidnappings becoming increasingly frequent and many areas of the country effectively ruled by gangs.

Comments

What To Read Next