Haiti gang violence displaces 7,600+ in Artibonite and Cite Soleil
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Gang-fuelled armed clashes have displaced more than 7,600 people across Haiti's Artibonite and West departments in recent weeks, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Friday, 27 June 2026, warning of deepening protection and health crises in one of the Western Hemisphere's most fragile states.
Scale of Displacement
According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), more than 2,600 people were uprooted in the Artibonite department in a single week, with over three-quarters of them seeking refuge in the commune of Marchand Dessalines. Separately, renewed armed clashes in Cite Soleil — one of Port-au-Prince's most densely populated neighbourhoods — since 13 June have displaced more than 5,000 additional people, compounding displacement that had already been building between March and May.
'Continuing violence in the Artibonite department is raising serious protection concerns,' OCHA said in its statement.
Health Services Under Severe Strain
Ongoing violence has severely disrupted health services, with women and girls bearing a disproportionate burden. Doctors Without Borders (MSF), the international medical non-governmental organisation, was forced to suspend operations at its maternity facility in Cite Soleil on 19 June, cutting off thousands of women from maternal and reproductive healthcare in the area. Health facilities across the affected zones have simultaneously reported a sharp rise in the number of wounded patients requiring treatment, according to OCHA.
Forced Returns Add to the Crisis
The displacement crisis is compounded by a surge in forced returns. The IOM reported that more than 25,500 people were forcibly returned to Haiti last month alone, bringing the cumulative total for 2026 to over 117,000 people. Of those returned, 24 per cent were women and nearly 8 per cent were children — populations already at heightened risk in a country where gang control over territory continues to expand.
Humanitarian Funding Critically Short
OCHA confirmed it is working alongside humanitarian partners to assess needs and deliver assistance, but acknowledged significant access constraints in gang-controlled areas. The 2026 Haiti humanitarian appeal, valued at $880 million, remains only 27 per cent funded — a critical shortfall that threatens the scale and continuity of relief operations. Without a substantial injection of donor support, aid agencies warn that response capacity will continue to fall well short of the need.
What Comes Next
With gang violence showing no sign of abating and the rainy season adding logistical pressure, humanitarian agencies face an increasingly difficult operating environment. The suspension of MSF's maternity services and the mounting displacement figures signal that without a security breakthrough and fresh funding, Haiti's humanitarian situation is likely to deteriorate further in the weeks ahead.