November 12, 2024

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Haitian gang leader threatens to kill US and Canadian hostages Wilson Joseph NNDC |  The world

Haitian gang leader threatens to kill US and Canadian hostages Wilson Joseph NNDC | The world

The leader of a gang Who kidnapped a group A video known to the AFP reports that he threatened to execute them over the weekend.

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The pictures were filmed on Wednesday, but were released on social media on Thursday Wilson Joseph In front of the coffins containing the bodies of five members of his gang, surrounded by armed men dressed in a robe.

“I’m going to kill these Americans because I’m not getting what I want.” Joseph threatened to speak in Creole.

Security sources told AFP that the kidnappers were demanding $ 17 million for the release of the hostages.

On Saturday, 17 American and Canadian missionaries and their children were abducted in broad daylight while on their way to a center orphanage in eastern gang-controlled East Port-au-Prince. .

Christian organization Assistant Ministries, Based in Ohio, which includes abducted missionaries, the group is said to include 12 adults and five children aged 18 to 48: eight months, three, six, 13 and 15 years old.

United States Advised Americans not to travel HaitiIn particular, by the abductions they warn of involving American citizens.

Since December 2020, Haitian police have been searching for Joseph for crimes including murder, kidnapping, vehicle theft and smuggling of trucks.

Amid the violence and insecurity, the Haitian government appointed a new director of police.

“It is time to work. We want to restore public order and return to the path of democracy,” said Prime Minister Ariel Henry on Twitter. “We want to organize elections.” Added.

For a long time in the capital’s poor districts, armed gangs have extended their control in recent months, especially by blocking access to oil terminals.

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Meanwhile, on Thursday, groups of taxi drivers blocked major roads and closed traffic in the Haitian capital to curb fuel shortages by mobs.

Across the city, protesters have expressed outrage at being forced to buy petrol on the black market.

Increasingly tight gang control in Port-au-Prince since June has prevented secure access to two of Haiti’s three oil terminals.

In early September, armed groups hijacked a third and more than a dozen tanker trucks located in the impoverished Side Soleil area.

On Thursday, protesters accused authorities of supporting fuel importers in a bid to curb renewable energy growth near the burning tire barrier.

“We don’t have a power grid in Haiti, so we have to look for diesel to run the generator,” commented an unnamed student for safety reasons.

“There are suns all over the world, but solar panels are very expensive,” he lamented.

Source: AFP

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