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Small drones bearing explosives are escalating the chaos in the Caribbean nation’s capital.
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Haiti turns to weaponized drones in fight against gangsIt’s also unclear who is in charge of the drone operations. Neither Haiti’s interim government nor its police have publicly claimed responsibility for them. But a Haitian government official ...
So far, the drones have killed 200-300 people, according to Port-au-Prince human rights activist Pierre Esperance.
Authorities in Haiti, including Kenyan police, have resorted to unorthodox and potentially dangerous methods in a bid to curb ...
The Haitian government has signed a contract with Mr. Prince, the private military contractor who founded Blackwater, a ...
The U.S. State Department and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) condemned recent threats made by powerful gangs in Haiti ... drone operations has not been officially identified. The Haitian ...
A new mission must include military-grade assets, such as helicopters, drones ... to Haiti. Any new mission must collaborate with local communities, civil society organizations and government ...
Soldier carries out an anti-gang operation in the Kenscoff neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti (Image: AP) PORT-AU-PRINCE: Dozens of protesters marched up the hills of Haiti's capital on Sunday ...
The troops will join the foreign police force known as the Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission – a US- and United Nations-backed initiative ... support from Haiti’s government.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Haiti’s government announced Monday that it approved what it called a “war budget” of $275,000 aimed at alleviating the country’s crisis as gang violence surges.
With the capital of Haiti on the cusp of falling to gangs, authorities in the crisis-racked Caribbean nation are turning to a new weapon in their fight against the armed groups: weaponized drones.
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