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Haiti’s Criminal Landscape

Haiti’s organized crime crisis is the product of geography, political collapse, institutional weakness, and armed gangs whose power now threatens to destabilize the country and the wider region.

Haiti
InSight Crime · By InSight Crime · 10 July 2026 · read the original in EN/ES →

Haiti’s criminal landscape has been shaped by the country’s tumultuous history, marked by long-standing political instability, economic hardship, and repeated natural disasters.

Gangs and other criminal networks in Haiti have gained strength and influence since the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, a crime that remains unsolved. The Caribbean nation’s absence of legitimate political leadership, coupled with its worsening security situation, has led some experts to warn that Haiti’s domestic criminal crisis could have long-term consequences across the region.

How Does Haiti’s Geography Lend Itself to Organized Crime?

What Is Haiti’s Organized Crime History?

Who Are Haiti’s Criminal Groups?

How Are Haiti’s Security Forces Structured?

Haiti’s Judicial System - Haiti’s Prisons Recent Haiti News

March 2026 — New Massacre Strikes Haiti’s Artibonite RegionMarch 2026 — New Massacre Hits Haiti’s Artibonite Region

At least 70 people were killed and another 30 injured in a gang attack on Jean-Denis, in Haiti’s Artibonite region, according to human rights organizations. The massacre displaced nearly 6,000 people and underscored the spread of gang violence beyond Port-au-Prince. The attack took place amid an offensive by Haitian security forces and private contractors against the gangs.

How Does Haiti’s Geography Lend Itself to Organized Crime?

Haiti is one of the 16 sovereign countries in the Caribbean region. It occupies the western third of the island of Hispaniola, which it shares with the Dominican Republic to the east. To the west, across the Windward Passage, lie Cuba and Jamaica. To the north are the Turks and Caicos Islands, the Bahamas, and the US state of Florida.

The nation’s porous maritime and land borders, together with its proximity to the United States, make it an ideal transit point for drugs arriving by plane and boat from Colombia and Venezuela, or moving overland to and from the Dominican Republic. Unmanned border checkpoints, clandestine airstrips, airports, shipping ports, and secluded docks along the country’s extensive coastline have long helped traffickers move drugs through Haiti. Heavily dependent on international imports in nearly every sector of its economy, Haiti sustains a broad exchange of goods and services that gives criminal actors opportunities to smuggle contraband.

The country’s location has made it especially vulnerable to hurricanes and earthquakes, which have caused severe economic damage and deepened political instability. These disasters have generated flows of international aid to Haiti, but those flows have been marred by corruption scandals. International post-disaster assistance has also extended into the security realm, but those deployments, too, have been plagued by problems. Haiti’s turbulent political situation, frequent natural disasters, and gang activity have led nearly 1.5 million Haitians to flee the country. This exodus has fueled the growth of migrant-smuggling and human-trafficking networks that cross the dangerous, and at times fatal, seas between Caribbean neighbors.

Haiti’s internal criminal landscape is centered on the capital region of Port-au-Prince, where principal areas are almost entirely controlled by armed gangs. These structures control every access route into Port-au-Prince, including maritime approaches to the main ports, internal road networks linking the capital to the north and south of the country, and the principal land routes connecting Port-au-Prince to the border with the Dominican Republic.

Gang territorial dominance enables near-total regulation of movement into and out of the capital and generates revenue through the extortion of commercial traffic. Such control requires sustained access to military-grade firepower through arms trafficking, a supply that rivals that of Haiti’s security forces.

What Is Haiti’s Organized Crime History?

After Haiti became a French colony in the eighteenth century, its enslaved population rose in revolt in 1791 under the leadership of Toussaint L’Ouverture. Haiti finally declared independence from France in 1804, becoming the first nation to successfully overthrow its colonial enslavers.

After independence, Haiti was beset by economic hardship and political instability. Many Haitians trace the country’s financial troubles and underdevelopment, which persist today, to the exorbitant reparations France forced Haiti to pay throughout the nineteenth century as indemnity for gaining independence. Haiti has also been subjected to foreign interventions, including a repressive US occupation from 1915 to 1934. The United States would later provide significant support to authoritarian rulers in Haiti, most notably the Duvalier family: François “Papa Doc” Duvalier and, later, his son Jean-Claude, known as “Baby Doc.” Father and son ruled Haiti as a brutal dictatorship from 1957 to 1986, when Baby Doc fled to France during a popular uprising.

During this period, the country became a criminal haven. Through the 1970s and 1980s, most of the cocaine consumed in the United States was trafficked through the Caribbean, including Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Drug trafficking became a major source of income for Haiti’s political and business elites, who used their connections to protect traffickers and launder money. Jean-Claude Duvalier’s government was especially notorious for its involvement in the drug trade. The regime provided protection and logistical support to Colombian traffickers, including Pablo Escobar, who used Haiti as a transit point.

In 1986, protests and strikes driven by economic and political grievances forced Baby Doc Duvalier from power. Haiti underwent a brief democratic transition in 1990, when Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president. But Aristide was overthrown in a military coup and forced into exile the following year. A military regime ruled the country until 1994, when US troops intervened to restore Aristide to power. Upon his return, Aristide disbanded the Haitian army, a move that removed a deeply corrupt security force but also weakened Haiti’s infrastructure for combating organized crime and drug trafficking.

During the latter half of the 1990s, Aristide’s presidency was marred by allegations of corruption, political violence, and drug trafficking. During his terms as president, Haitian traffickers worked with the Medellín Cartel and, later, the Norte del Valle Cartel to move hundreds of tons of cocaine from Colombia through Haiti and into the United States. These networks allegedly bribed local officials, police officers, and even Aristide himself.

In 2004, Aristide, who had forged his own ties to criminal networks, was overthrown again, and a UN peacekeeping mission was established to stabilize the country. Drug traffickers continued shifting their operations to overland routes through Central America after authorities cracked down on smuggling along the maritime corridor. Even so, the US State Department estimated that by 2006, 8% of the cocaine reaching the United States still passed through Hispaniola.

In 2010, a devastating earthquake killed more than 200,000 Haitians, displaced millions more, and caused widespread destruction.

In 2011, shortly after the earthquake, Michel Martelly was elected president, inheriting a country marked by dire poverty, rising violence, and entrenched corruption. Martelly was accused of embezzlement in the notorious Petrocaribe scandal, which came into public view in 2017 and involved the disappearance of $3.8 billion from a Venezuelan oil-subsidy program intended to provide Haiti with discounted oil. He was also linked to street gangs, drug trafficking, and money laundering.

In 2016, Haiti again held elections, but allegations of fraud and voter suppression sparked protests and undermined the legitimacy of the newly elected Jovenel Moïse. In 2018, protests erupted across Haiti calling for Moïse’s resignation amid accusations of corruption and mismanagement of the country’s resources. Rather than resign, Moïse remained in office beyond his presidential mandate, triggering a constitutional and political crisis that culminated in 2021, when he was assassinated at his home in Port-au-Prince. The killing plunged the country into deeper political turmoil. Ariel Henry became acting prime minister, while protests and violence erupted across the country.

Since the assassination, the Haitian government has failed to find its footing and has struggled to control much of the country. Pervasive gang rule in Port-au-Prince, mass kidnappings, and the unceasing flow of firearms into Haiti have all contributed to the country’s continuing deterioration.

In 2022, the UN, the United States, and Canada imposed coordinated sanctions on Haitian gang leaders, politicians, and business elites for their alleged roles in drug trafficking, money laundering, and the financing of criminal activity, but so far there have been few consequences.

The following year saw the formation of a gang coalition known as Viv Ansanm, or Living Together, which united the country’s two main criminal factions, G9 and GPep, in a common front against the government. In early 2024, the coalition launched a series of attacks on public infrastructure that paralyzed Port-au-Prince and shut down Haiti’s main airport, leading to the resignation of Haiti’s then president, Ariel Henry.

Months later, a Haitian body charged with governing the country and organizing elections, the Transitional Presidential Council, or TPC, took power. It failed to organize elections, was plagued by corruption allegations, and was dissolved in 2026. US-backed Prime Minister Alix Didier assumed full governing control of Haiti in February 2026. Shortly afterward, Kenyan police contingents from the MSS mission formally withdrew from the country, and the UN reconfigured the operation into a new initiative called the Gang Suppression Force, or GSF. In April 2026, the GSF mission deployed military officers from Chad to strengthen Haiti’s defense against the gangs.

Who Are Haiti’s Criminal Groups?

Hundreds of gangs operate across Haiti, and Port-au-Prince has suffered the worst violence stemming from criminal groups. The UN estimates that gangs control most of the capital, though many Haitians believe almost the entire city has fallen under criminal control.

In recent years, the country’s gang landscape has been dominated by two major factions. The first, G9 and Family, or G9 an fanmi, is a federation that includes some of the most powerful gangs in Port-au-Prince. Its leader is Jimmy Chérizier, alias “Barbecue,” a former police officer. The group was previously linked to Moïse and Henry’s Haitian Tèt Kale Party, or Parti Haïtien Tèt Kale, PHTK, acting as vigilante enforcers for the party. After Moïse’s assassination, however, Barbecue cut ties with them as the group gained significant political capital in the areas of Port-au-Prince where it operates.

G9 and Family focuses mainly on extortion, but it also carries out kidnappings for ransom and, in some cases, has taken control of public services such as electricity or water provision in exchange for payment. Barbecue and G9, for example, have blockaded Terminal Varreux, Haiti’s largest oil terminal, as part of a coordinated effort by criminal groups to restrict access to fuel across Haiti and destabilize the government.

The second gang faction is G-PEP, another federation and a historic rival of G9. PHTK’s political opponents have broadly supported the group, though the extent of any material or financial backing remains unclear. At times, G-PEP has allied with 400 Mawozo, a separate gang that rose to prominence through mass kidnappings, mostly of Haitians but also of foreigners, including 17 Western missionaries in 2021.

Many other gangs also operate in Haiti, including 5 Seconds, or 5 Segonn, which has seized critical infrastructure and facilities such as Haiti’s Supreme Court building and demanded ransom from the government for their release; and Kraze Barye, a Port-au-Prince-based gang that rose to prominence after killing several police officers and burning down a police station in early 2023.

The final months of 2023 saw the emergence of an unprecedented alliance between the G9 and G-PEP federations, both seeking to form a united front against the state. The alliance, called “Viv Ansanm,” or “Living Together,” has given the gangs a platform from which to sow political chaos through coordinated attacks on critical infrastructure, including airports, seaports, government buildings, and prisons.

Repeated attacks on key infrastructure have paralyzed the capital, derailing efforts to restore order and allowing Viv Ansanm to expand into new territory. In 2024, gang activity surged across departments near Port-au-Prince, displacing thousands of people. Young boys in particular are targeted for forced recruitment by criminal groups, as internal displacement and economic precarity make this population more vulnerable to trafficking and extortion.

According to the UN, at least 26 gangs, nearly half of whose members are minors, now control the vast majority of neighborhoods in Port-au-Prince and have displaced at least 1.4 million people through violence.

In recent years, gangs have massacred hundreds of civilians. Criminal groups such as Gran Grif murdered dozens of people in 2024 in the Artibonite region, just north of Port-au-Prince, while the Wharf Jeremie gang killed nearly 200 people in Cité Soleil months later. In March 2026, before the expected arrival of the GSF, gangs carried out a multi-day attack on towns in Artibonite, burning homes and shooting dozens of civilians, displacing thousands more.

How Are Haiti’s Security Forces Structured?

Haiti has weak security forces, plagued by corruption, ineffectiveness, ties to gangs, chronic understaffing, poor training, and underfunding.

The principal law-enforcement agency is the Haitian National Police, or Police Nationale d’Haïti, PNH, created in 1995 to replace the disbanded Haitian Armed Forces, which had been accused of human rights abuses and involvement in coups.

The absence of a functioning elected government means that security forces face little supervision or direction and have often drifted into criminality. Chronically underpaid PNH officers have been accused of involvement in arms trafficking, state-sponsored massacres of civilians, and direct ties to, or membership in, some of Haiti’s gangs.

Haiti’s Coast Guard, part of the Haitian National Police, or Police Nationale d’Haïti, PNH, suffers from similar understaffing, despite being responsible for guarding more than 900 miles of coastline.

The depth of gang control in Haiti prompted the creation of a UN-backed international security force to support the country’s threadbare police. But the Multinational Security Support mission, or MSS, deployed in mid-2024 and led by Kenyan police officers, did little to confront the gangs amid shortages of personnel and funding and uncertain political backing. The initiative’s shortcomings led to the restructuring of the MSS into the Gang Suppression Force, or GSF, again authorized by the UN Security Council.

In 2025, the TPC confirmed that the government was using foreign contractors to fight gangs, with the most significant deal involving Vectus Global, led by Erik Prince, the former CEO of the private military contracting firm Blackwater.

Since then, Vectus has deployed roughly 200 Salvadoran contractors to train local police to target gangs with commercially available drones loaded with explosives, a military tactic adapted from Ukraine.

Haiti has also seen an increase in armed self-defense groups deployed alongside state forces to curb the expansion of Viv Ansanm and other gangs. In April 2023, a vigilante movement known as “Bwa Kale” gained traction after the lynching and burning of 14 gang members. Since then, acts of self-defense have developed into organized militias operating alongside state forces. Semi-permanent barricades at neighborhood entrances, patrols, temporary checkpoints, and identity checks designed to control access to communities and detect potential gang members have become more common in urban areas across the country as police forces have increased permits allowing citizens to carry weapons.

But relations between security forces and civilians can also be fraught. According to UN reporting, between March 2025 and January 2026, police and state prosecutors killed more than 1,000 Haitians in security operations against gangs. Human rights groups have raised concerns about the drone campaign by state security forces, which has injured dozens of civilians, including children.

Haiti’s Judicial SystemHaiti’s Judicial System

Haiti’s judicial system has faced many challenges in recent years, including limited resources, corruption, and political interference. Overburdened by delayed judicial appointments, a surge in violence, and protests by judges and court clerks demanding better salaries and working conditions, the system has all but collapsed.

In June and July 2022, gangs invaded the Supreme Court building in Port-au-Prince, destroying records and evidence.

Vigilante actors have also carried out quasi-judicial proceedings and punitive actions that have prompted gang retaliation.

Haiti’s PrisonsHaiti’s Prisons

Haiti’s prisons are plagued by overcrowding, underfunding, limited resources, and poor oversight.

The prisons hold a range of detainees, many of them accused of misdemeanors such as petty theft or minor disputes, or imprisoned arbitrarily for protesting, alongside violent criminals and gang members.

More than 80% of the country’s roughly 7,500 prisoners are being held in pretrial detention, according to 2025 UN estimates.

Repeated mass prison escapes further expose the weaknesses of the penitentiary system. More than 170 inmates escaped during a single riot in 2016, while more than 300 broke free in 2014 during a shootout between guards and armed assailants.

Prisons also suffer from a critical shortage of food and staff, contributing to the deaths of well over 100 incarcerated Haitians in 2022. In 2024, the capital’s two main prisons were attacked by gangs, leading to the escape of 4,600 inmates and strengthening several gang leadership structures. In response, Haiti declared a state of emergency, a strategy it also applied to the country’s central region in 2025.

Haiti’s broken prison system has recently fueled violence by the “Bwa Kale” vigilante group, which has turned to extrajudicial street executions and public mob lynchings. The few operational prisons outside the capital face severe overcrowding and high inmate mortality from starvation and disease.

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