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Artibonite: an agricultural area turned into a valley of crime

  • April 7, 2024
  • 24
  • 19
artibonite:-an-agricultural-area-turned-into-a-valley-of-crime

To understand this grip of crime in the agricultural area, we have to go back at least to October 2022

Read this article in French

Far from the cameras and the attention received by insecurity in Port-au-Prince, gangs steal livestock, attack and loot peasants in the Artibonite region.

Sexual abuse became commonplace in towns such as Liancourt, Petite-Rivière and Verrettes.

From April 2023 to March 2024, the Platform of Organized Women for the Development of Artibonite (PLAFODA) counts more than 1370 cases of rape in the department.

In addition, bandits attack the peasants. In April last year, the World Food Programme (WFP) recorded 5,000 hectares of abandoned farmland in the department.

Sexual abuse became commonplace in towns such as Liancourt, Petite-Rivière and Verrettes.

The commune of Liancourt comprises 54 localities, only 34 of which are currently habitable, according to a report by the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

The dead are piling up.

Between January 2022 and November 2023, more than 1,690 people were killed, injured or abducted in Bas-Artibonite, according to a United Nations report.

Read also: Small businesses are closing due to gangs in Bas Artibonite

Located in the northwest, the Artibonite Valley, with its 28,000 hectares, remains the largest in the country for rice cultivation.

To understand this grip of crime in the agricultural zone, we have to go back at least to October 2022.

This month, Palmis’ gang leader, Widzer Estimable, was killed in violent clashes with police.

At the beginning of the year, the violence had caused thousands of citizens to flee.

When the kingpin, also known as «Lodè», died, his supporters vowed to return to avenge him, according to the testimonies of several local residents.

The threat was taken seriously.

Dozens of citizens then set up a self-defense brigade and erected barricades in several neighborhoods of Petite-Rivière, the commercial lung of the department.

Read also: Saint-Michel clairin producers struggle to make deliveries, as gangs guard roads

Recently returned from Port-au-Prince to work in his hometown of Petite-Rivière, Wendel Pierre is contributing to these efforts.

Behind the improvised barriers in the streets, the wreckage of cars and the used tires, the young electromechanic and other young people vowed to do everything they could to prevent the gangs from returning.

In October 2022, members of the population erected a barricade at the entrance to the downtown area of Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite, on the «Pon Bouk,» as it is locally known.

Armed with machetes, sticks, and cans filled with petrol, young people who until yesterday were living with their parents and going to school have become neighbourhood guards.

From October 2022 until the beginning of January 2023, they watched for the arrival of the bandits, day and night.

But early last year, a group of citizens, concerned about the situation, announced that they had reached an agreement with the gangs to give up their revenge.

Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite

As in several neighborhoods of the commune of Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite, this alley at the bottom of the city was barricaded, in October 2022, by members of the population, to prevent the free movement of bandits.

The barricades were then lifted with the promise that activities could resume their normal course.

It was a bad decision, several residents of the area told AyiboPost.

«People started to let their guard down and that’s when the bandits managed to break into downtown Petite-Rivière,» says Wendel Pierre.

Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite

One of the houses burned by bandits in October 2022 in Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite. Residents had to flee the lower part of the city.

Gang attacks have intensified, with more than 9,000 people forced to flee their homes in search of a safer place, according to city hall data.

Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite

In October 2022, houses were burned and destroyed by bandits; the inhabitants then deserted the lower part of the town of Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite.

On January 27, 2023, the police officers abandoned the Petite-Rivière police station.

Threatened with death by a gang leader, Wendel Pierre abandoned everything and returned to take refuge in Port-au-Prince in January 2023.

According to him, some of his fellow brigadiers had to leave the country to escape death.

«Something has broken inside me and I need time to heal,» Pierre told AyiboPost, referring to the psychological problems he faced during those three months.

More than 9,000 people had to flee their homes in search of a safer place, according to city hall data.

Today, the bandits have free rein in Petite-Rivière.

The phenomenon is not at its beginning.

Since 2018, the rise of gangs in Bas-Artibonite has stifled local life, impacting all spheres of activity in the region.

The inhabitants of Liancourt, Petite-Rivière and Verrettes were constantly tortured by armed men.

For the past six years, this place with high agricultural potential has seen a significant increase in crime, and has seen its agricultural skills decline.

«We are living in an untenable situation,» said Petite-Rivière’s interim mayor, Lereste Dort.

The premises of the town hall are no longer functioning. The city’s schools are moving at a slower pace. The peace court is no longer able to carry out legal proceedings.

Since 2018, the rise of gangs in Bas-Artibonite has stifled local life, impacting all spheres of activity in the region.

The Dupuy Public Market in Petite-Rivière fell under the control of armed gangs. «We haven’t had any possibility of collecting taxes for some time,» says Lereste Dort.

The Charles Colimon Hospital — supported by the NGO Zanmi Lasante — is one of the few institutions still operating in the commune.

The institution’s officials are forced to treat gang members, according to testimonies received on the spot by AyiboPost.

The continuation of the hospital’s operations remains the priority, Bob Eden Gaston, a general practitioner and interim director of the facility, told AyiboPost.

«We can’t forbid anyone from coming to the hospital for treatment,» the doctor told AyiboPost.

It is not clear how long this institution will continue to serve the population in a context of fuel and medicine shortages.

The institution’s officials are forced to treat gang members.

During an attempted invasion by Savien’s gangs in July 2023, some of the non-community staff were temporarily relocated, as a precautionary measure. This leaves the operating room for caesarean deliveries without a gynaecologist.

The manager, Gaston, says he has observed an increase in cases of diabetes and high blood pressure at the hospital in recent months. «It could be related to the current situation,» he says.

Citizens are desperate. «We are living with fear in our stomachs, gangs are setting up everywhere,» a sweets merchant from Petite Rivière told AyiboPost. «We have to keep a low profile to avoid being robbed or kidnapped,» she said.

According to the woman, two members of her family were kidnapped and then released for ransom in November 2023. One of them was severely beaten and has not yet fully recovered from the attack.

We live with fear in our stomachs, gangs are setting up everywhere. We are forced to keep a low profile to avoid being robbed or kidnapped.

The peasants of Artibonite are paying a heavy price for the bandits’ actions, according to testimonies collected on the spot.

In the localities of Laverdure and Grasèt, gangs do not hesitate to loot, steal the cattle of the inhabitants and rape with impunity.

In December last year, the bandits broke into Ylèné’s family home in Laverdure. The thieves took away the cattle and poultry.

«Since then, they have been coming back all the time and unexpectedly to steal our belongings,» says Ylèné.

In the Artibonite Valley, irrigation is now under the control of bandits.

Read also: Sugarcane cultivation explodes in Saint-Michel-de-l’Attalaye

Many peasants abandon arable land because they cannot pay the bandits to harvest their produce.

Because of a tax imposed by the gangs on the water, it was almost impossible for the planters to water the plants, at the beginning of the bean planting period between the end of last year until January 2024.

«You can pay up to 1,500 gourdes every time you want to water,» says farmer Ylèné.

On the other hand, it is the irrigation canals that are being diverted.

In the locality of Boudèt, in Savien, for example, the gangs have diverted the trajectory of the Bidone canal, which usually waters more than five localities.

You can pay up to 1,500 gourdes each time you want to water.

«This reality aggravates the irrigation problem in the valley and makes the situation of the planters catastrophic,» says technician André Saint-Louis, an agricultural technician and head of the association Réseau des Organisations pour l’Intégration des Planteurs du Bas-Artibonite (ROIPBA).

All this is in addition to the fact that the main markets, such as the one in Pont Sondé, have not been accessible to farmers for at least three years and the prices of agricultural inputs continue to rise.

«At the moment, a bag of Urea fertilizer costs 8,000 gourdes and the full one sells for about 8,500 gourdes,» says the Saint-Louis technician.

Five years ago, these products were selling for about 1,000 gourdes. As a result, most farmers are abandoning arable land as a result of the continuing losses.

The Artibonite Valley Development Organization (ODVA), which has historically been involved in agriculture, is at its wit’s end.

Faced with a loss of cadre, cases of corruption and other internal problems, ODVA «does not have the means» to continue the fight, says agronomist Jacques Donatien, assigned to the soil conservation directorate within the institution.

At the moment, a bag of Urea fertilizer costs 8,000 gourdes and the full one sells for about 8,500 gourdes.

Gangs are increasingly controlling remote areas in the Artibonite.

An IOM report published in June 2023 reveals that more than 22,000 people fled rural areas to seek refuge in urban centres between January 2022 and October 2023.

Rodney Paul lives in Verrettes.

Pursued by gangs, the teacher and native of Liancourt left the area three months ago, to take refuge under the roof of his family members, who were displaced before him.

«Personally, I’m having a very hard time with it,» Paul told AyiboPost. «I’m surviving in indignation and with the help of other people,» he said.

Read also: El Niño is affecting farmers in Haiti

Of the 54 localities of Liancourt, only three are still inhabited today.

«Most of the people who remain are those who have nowhere else to go,» said a source on the ground, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals.

In Liancourt and other surrounding areas, public services are at ground zero.

«No electricity, no drinking water. The police station, the town hall, the main health centre, the radio stations have all closed their doors. Only the civil registry office is still functioning in the commune,» the source told AyiboPost.

The people who stay are mostly those who have nowhere else to go.

In January 2023, Savien’s bandits launched a bloody attack on the police station of this commune bordering Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite, causing the death of six police officers.

As a result of the gang’s repeated attacks, an armed protection brigade at Liancourt, called the Coalition, was formed.

With the support of members of the population and the diaspora, they arm themselves, travel the roads and collect money in different places to ensure their functioning.

Read also: In Haiti, ordinary citizens become big weapons buyers

With formal justice almost no longer in existence, the brigadiers themselves apprehended and killed people suspected of belonging to Savien’s gang.

Slippages occur regularly, according to several testimonies collected by AyiboPost.

People who come from Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite are sometimes accused of being scouts, bandits or gang members on the run.

«As soon as your identity card mentions Petite-Rivière, it’s already a first condition for your execution,» Exumé Rotchild, a journalist with Radio communautaire de Desarmes (RCD), told AyiboPost.

In 2023, a taxi driver from Desarmes was killed because people identified him as a gang scout.

During the same year, a tap-tap driver on the Petite-Rivière — Verrettes route was also lynched and burned for unsolved suspicions.

As soon as your identity card mentions Petite-Rivière, it is already a first condition for your execution.

From a humanitarian point of view, «this is unprecedented,» said Bressiac Lubien, coordinator of the National Federation of Human Rights Organizations based in Gonaives. «Thousands of people are dispossessed and are now living by begging,» he said.

According to the official, «more and more students, without any support from their families, are no longer able to go to school, which increases the number of street children.»

Women, already vulnerable, are swelling the ranks of victims of violence.

Lisette Vertyl, departmental coordinator of the platform of women organized for the development of Artibonite, is surprised by the statistics collected by the organization on cases of sexual violence.

«This is the first time we have faced such an explosion of rape cases,» Vertyl told AyiboPost.

Many women are unable to support themselves.

«Many women are forced into prostitution to survive,» Vertyl told AyiboPost.

By Jerome Wendy Norestyl & Wethzer Piercin

Cover image: Haitian farmers are working in a field. | © RHINEWS


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Jerome Wendy Norestyl