Haiti crisis and UN-authorised security mission

Haiti — State Collapse, Hunger, and the Struggle for Security

A nation on the brink faces famine, gang domination, and a slow international response, despite UN authorisation of a new multinational force.

Updated 13 Nov 2025 | Location: Port-au-Prince, Artibonite, and nationwide

At a Glance

StatusState of emergency extended; UN-backed multinational security mission preparing deployment amid worsening gang control. [UN; Reuters; The Guardian]
Period CoveredJan 2024 – Nov 2025 (current)
Lead ActorsGovernment of Haiti (transitional council); gang coalitions; UN Security Council and contributing states (Kenya, Jamaica, Benin). [UN; Al Jazeera; Washington Post]
Affected CiviliansOver 6 million face acute food insecurity; hospitals and aid workers targeted by gang violence. [Al Jazeera; MSF; ICRC]
UN / Regional MechanismsUN Security Council Resolution 418 (2025) authorising Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission; BINUH and OCHA frameworks in place. [UN; ReliefWeb]

Timeline of Key Events

  • Aug 2024 — Widespread displacement as gang coalitions expand control across Port-au-Prince and Artibonite. [AP; Reuters]
  • 30 Sep 2025 — UN Security Council authorises deployment of new international force led by Kenya. [The Guardian; Washington Post]
  • Oct 2025 — Six million people reported in acute hunger; humanitarian access blocked in multiple zones. [Al Jazeera; ReliefWeb]
  • Nov 2025 — MSF and ICRC warn that the health system is collapsing as violence cuts off care facilities. [MSF; ICRC]

Metrics & Indicators

IndicatorBaselineCurrent StatusTarget (Five Actions)
Durable ceasefire in placeNone; local truces sporadic (2023)No formal ceasefire; gang control extends to 80% of capital. [Reuters; Washington Post]Ceasefire framework with third-party monitoring under MSS
Humanitarian accessRestricted but operational (early 2024)Aid convoys blocked; health access collapsing. [ICRC; MSF]Restored corridors under UN-carve-out framework
Food security / malnutrition~2.5 million acutely food insecure (2022)Over 6 million acutely hungry; 1.6 million at emergency levels. [Al Jazeera; ReliefWeb]Stabilise below 2 million through secured supply and aid access
Displacement~150,000 (2022)Over 500,000 displaced internally; multiple slums emptied. [UN; ICRC]Voluntary return supported by recovery programs
Estimated people affected~3 million (2019 baseline)~8.4 million affected by violence, hunger, or lack of access. [ReliefWeb; MSF; ICRC]Under 3 million with full MSS and humanitarian stabilisation
Information environmentActive but fragile local mediaFragmented; reporters face threats; community stations disrupted. [Ayibopost; Le Nouvelliste]Protected information networks with verified reporting

Situation Overview

Haiti faces simultaneous humanitarian and governance collapse. The state of emergency continues amid rampant gang violence, acute food insecurity, and institutional paralysis. [ReliefWeb; Al Jazeera; Reuters]

The UN Security Council authorised a multinational security support mission led by Kenya in September 2025, but deployment delays have left the population exposed. [The Guardian; UN; Washington Post]

Healthcare infrastructure is nearing collapse as attacks on hospitals force MSF and ICRC to suspend or relocate operations. [MSF; ICRC]

Why It Matters

Haiti’s crisis represents a critical test of collective security and humanitarian coordination. Without credible law enforcement and humanitarian access, millions remain beyond reach and regional instability deepens. [UN; ReliefWeb; Al Jazeera]

Application of the Five Actions

  • Ceasefire Services Package – Support gang ceasefire verification via local UN-police liaison and rapid response logistics. [UN; Reuters]
  • Rapid Mediation Window – Enable community-level dialogue in Port-au-Prince, Artibonite, and Cap-Haïtien to de-escalate local violence. [Le Nouvelliste; Ayibopost]
  • Peacebuilding Fund – Recovery & Stabilisation Window – Finance community infrastructure and job programs tied to stabilisation areas. [ReliefWeb; ICRC]
  • Humanitarian Carve-Outs – Protect healthcare, food convoys, and schools through designated safe zones. [MSF; ReliefWeb]
  • UN-Tech Joint Cell – Build a secure information platform linking UN, NGOs, and media for verified incident tracking. [UN; Ayibopost]

Key Takeaways

  • 6 million Haitians face acute hunger under expanding gang control. [Al Jazeera]
  • International security assistance remains delayed and fragmented. [Guardian; Washington Post]
  • Implementation of Five Actions could stabilise security and reopen humanitarian access. [ReliefWeb; UN]

Likely Outcome

Without a credible security presence and access carve-outs, humanitarian collapse will deepen. If the MSS mission deploys and the Five Actions are coordinated, food and health systems can be stabilised within six months. [UN; ICRC; MSF]

Accountability Today

Accountability mechanisms remain weak. Reports of police abuses and gang infiltration persist, while journalists face intimidation and NGOs operate under threat. [UN; Ayibopost; Le Nouvelliste]

Accountability with the Five Actions Implemented

Deployment of a UN-Tech Joint Cell and transparent community monitoring would enable data-driven reporting, independent verification, and strengthened civilian oversight. [UN; ReliefWeb]

Implementation Path

  1. Immediate (0–30 days): Establish operational base for MSS in Port-au-Prince and secure humanitarian corridors. [UN; Reuters]
  2. 30–90 days: Launch ceasefire verification and local mediation frameworks. [ReliefWeb; Le Nouvelliste]
  3. Quarterly: Integrate joint reporting dashboards for aid delivery and gang control mapping. [UN; Ayibopost]

Sources

Sources are provided for context only. All rights remain with original publishers.


The Spirit of Dag – Reflection

“The Charter does not need rewriting; it needs remembering.”
– The Spirit of Dag

Haiti shows the cost of global neglect — the Five Actions offer a path to restore safety, access, and human dignity.

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The Spirit of Dag
Reviving the moral courage of the United Nations.
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