Haiti Gang Releases all 12 Christian Missionaries Held Captive for 2 Months

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A Haiti gang has released all 12 hostages two months to the day after they were kidnapped in Haiti’s capital, Haiti National Police spokesman Garry Desrosiers and two U.S. government sources confirmed to the Miami Herald.

The hostages were abducted just east of Port-au-Prince by a notorious gang, 400 Mawozo, and were among a group of 12 adults and five children, including an 8-month-old. Of the group of 17 missionaries, all but one is American. The other one is Canadian.

“Today, there is a feeling of contentment, not just for the hostages and the American and Canadian people but for Haiti,” said Gédéon Jean, director of the Center for Analysis and Research in Human Rights in Port-au-Prince, which monitors kidnappings.

Jean, however, noted that the last of the hostages were held for two months. That is highly unusual and calls for the United States, which helps fund the Haitian National Police, to “provide effective support going forward,” Jean said.

“There are so many Haitians terrorized by kidnappings and extreme levels of violence, even as the humanitarian and security crisis in Haiti continues to worsen,” said U.S. Rep. Andy Levin, D-Mich., founder and chair of the House Haiti Caucus. “This year alone, nearly 800 people in Haiti have been kidnapped. I reiterate my fervent belief that the United States and our international partners must work urgently to support Haitian-led efforts to bring about a real and accountable democracy that can bring peace and security to the Haitian people.”

In a statement, the Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries that ran the missionary trip thanked the public for its “fervent prayers” over the past two months.

“We glorify God for answered prayer — the remaining twelve hostages are FREE!” the group said in a statement. “Join us in praising God that all seventeen of our loved ones are now safe.”

The missionaries and their relatives were kidnapped in Haiti on Oct. 16 and were the longest-held hostages in the country, where kidnappings for ransom have continued unabated.

After the abduction, Christian Aid Ministries asked supporters to pray and to fast “to intercede for those who are still being held as well as those who have been released.”

The first two of the hostages were released in late November, followed by three more missionaries on Dec. 5. After they were freed, U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said the U.S. was continuing to work at the highest levels with the Haitian government and Canada “to do everything we can to see to it that the remaining hostages are released as soon as possible.”



The gang had asked for $17 million, or $1 million per person, to release the hostages. One of its leaders had threatened to kill the hostages if the ransom was not paid.

Haiti is seeing an unprecedented spike in gang violence and kidnapping, following the July 7 assassination of its president, Jovenel Moïse, which was later followed by a magnitude 7.2 earthquake on Aug. 14 in the southern region of the country.

Gangs have hijacked fuel tankers and blocked the main road connecting the capital of Port-au-Prince with the southern peninsula, as well as other regions. Since June, violent clashes between warring armed groups have led to the displacement of more than 19,000 Haitians living in the Martissant neighborhood.

The release of the hostages came as the State Department was finalizing plans to ask foreign partners on Friday to make “commitments to prevent further deterioration” in Haiti as the country’s security crisis deepens, the State Department said. The widening insecurity amid the country’s deepening social, economic and political turmoil is affecting every aspect of Haitian life.

With the United Nations Security Council not addressing the security concerns in Haiti, some U.S. diplomats have raised the possibility of Haiti’s foreign partners coming together to assist the Haiti National Police with training. The Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti and has been invited to participate, has called for even stronger intervention, stopping short of saying a United Nations peacekeeping force should return.

Sources say security will be a top concern, along with economics and governance, among the U.S., the United Nations and the Organization of American States. Partners could also weigh in on elections ahead of Feb. 7, 2022, when the current government will have even less legitimacy. Despite assertions that Moïse’s term expired on Feb. 7, 2021, the U.S., U.N. and OAS all asserted that his presidential mandate ends on Feb. 7, 2022.

Though the international community has stopped publicly pressuring Haiti to hold elections, interim Prime Minister Ariel Henry, appointed by Moïse before his July 7 assassination, has discussed balloting for a new president, parliament and local elections next year as well as voting on a new constitution. Meanwhile, members of civil society continue to push for a two-year transition.

On Sunday, the civic-society coalition, which has its own political accord, installed a National Transitional Council, the first step toward mounting a government with a president to run the country. With both sides at an impasse, and Haiti’s political landscape deteriorating daily and 4.2 million Haitians facing hunger, the country’s foreign partners face a huge challenge — and so far have been reluctant to step into the fray following criticism of their previous involvement in Haiti’s affairs.

Brian Nichols, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, will chair the virtual meeting with international aid organizations and foreign governments.