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Residents of Haiti’s Cite Soleil demand protection after gang violence displaces hundreds

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) 鈥 Residents of the Cite Soleil neighborhood in Haiti’s capital protested Tuesday, demanding government protection after gang violence over the weekend.

Roselaine Jean-Pierre, 67, was among two dozen people who gathered at an intersection in Cite Soleil holding tree branches and demanding that police intervene in the area, even as gunshots were ringing nearby.

鈥淚 did not do anything to deserve this,鈥 said Jean-Pierre, who fled her home on Sunday, and is now sleeping in the streets of the capital, Port-au-Prince.

Some of the protesters said they saw people getting killed over the weekend in Cite Soleil, where burned cars and dead cows could also be observed. Haitian authorities have not released any information on casualties.

鈥淚 know of seven people that have been killed and also people that have been shot,鈥 said Michel-Ange Toussaint, who had returned briefly to her home in Cite Soleil to gather some clothes.

She said the attacks on civilians began Sunday around 6 p.m., prompting many people to flee the area in search of safety. 鈥淚t is our good feet that saved us,鈥 Toussaint said.

Gangs have overtaken more than 90% of Port-au-Prince since the in July 2021 at his home. Police say they have expanded their activities 鈥 including looting, kidnapping, sexual assaults and rape 鈥 into the countryside. Haiti has not had a president since the assassination.

In a statement released Monday, the humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders announced the evacuation of its hospital in Cite Soleil following the intense clashes Sunday.

In April, the first foreign troops linked to a U.N. force .

The U.N. Security Council in late September to authorize a 5,550-member force, which has not fully arrived in the island nation. An unknown number of have so far been deployed.

A report published earlier this year by the International Organization for Migration found that gang violence has displaced more than 1.4 million people in Haiti, with approximately 200,000 of them now living in crowded and underfunded sites in the nation鈥檚 capital.

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