Washington: The Trump
administration has told Congress that it intends to designate Haitian gangs as
foreign terrorist organizations, people familiar with the notification told The
Associated Press.
The State Department
similarly labeled eight Latin American crime organizations in February as it
ratcheted up pressure on cartels operating in the U.S. and anyone assisting
them. The new move indicates that the administration plans to put similar
pressure on gangs from Haiti. The designation carries with it sanctions and
penalties for anyone providing “material support” for the group.
It comes after a series
of steps against the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, which was designated a
foreign terror organization and then dubbed an invading force under an
18th-century wartime law to justify the deportation of Venezuelan migrants to a
notorious El Salvador prison under President Donald Trump’s sweeping
immigration crackdown.
That invocation of the
Alien Enemies Act is significant because it gives the president wide powers to
imprison and deport noncitizens who otherwise would have the right to ask for
asylum in the U.S. or have their cases heard in immigration courts.
Trump, at a rally in
Michigan on Tuesday, touted his designation of the six Latin American crime
groups as foreign terrorist organizations, including MS-13 and Tren de Aragua.
“They’ve been designated the highest level of terrorist, and that lets us do a
lot of things that you wouldn’t be able to do,” Trump said.
According to the
notification sent to congressional committees on April 23, the Trump
administration said it intends to designate the Haitian gangs Viv Ansanm and
Gran Grif as foreign terrorist organizations, according to two people familiar
with the message, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details that
have not yet been made public.
A third person
confirmed that the foreign relations committees in the House and Senate
received the notification.
The State Department and the White House did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
The designation follows
a Trump administration move in February to nix protections that shielded half a
million Haitians from deportation.
Tens of thousands of
Haitians came to the United States under a Biden-era program permitting people
from four countries including Haiti to stay for two years provided they had a
financial sponsor and bought their own plane ticket. The Trump administration
terminated that program and is seeking to revoke the status of those admitted
under the Biden administration.
The foreign terrorist
organization label has typically been reserved for groups like al-Qaida or the
Islamic State group, but applying it to Haitian gangs means that the Trump
White House is expanding the longstanding U.S. definition of foreign terrorism.
Viv Ansanm, which means
“Living Together,” is a powerful gang coalition that formed in September 2023
and is best known for launching a series of attacks starting in February 2024
across Port-au-Prince and beyond that shuttered Haiti’s main international
airport for nearly three months, freed hundreds of inmates from the country’s
two biggest prisons and eventually forced former Prime Minister Ariel Henry to
resign.
The coalition united
more than a dozen gangs, including two of Haiti’s biggest ones: G-9 and G-Pèp,
which were fierce rivals. Gangs control at least 85% of Haiti’s capital, with
Viv Ansanm attacking once peaceful communities in recent weeks in a bid to
control even more territory.
Gran Grif, also known
as the Savien gang, forms part of the Viv Ansanm coalition and is led by
Luckson Elan, best known as “General Luckson.”
It is the biggest gang operating
in Haiti’s central Artibonite region with some 100 members.
It was blamed for an
attack in the town of Pont-Sondé in October 2024 in which more than 70 people
were killed in one of the biggest massacres in Haiti’s recent history.
Gran Grif also was
blamed for a recent attack in the Petite Riviere community in which several
people were killed, including an 11-year-old child. Gran Grif was formed after
Prophane Victor, an ex-member of Haiti’s Parliament who represented the Petite
Riviere community in Artibonite, began arming young men in the region,
according to a U.N. report. Victor was arrested in January.
Canada sanctioned him
in June 2023, as did the U.S. in September 2024, accusing him of supporting
gangs “that have committed serious human rights abuse.”
More than 5,600 people
were killed across Haiti last year, with gang violence leaving more than 1
million homeless in the country of nearly 12 million people, according to the
U.N.
While much of the
violence has occurred in Port-au-Prince, gangs recently struck the city of
Mirebalais in Haiti’s central region and freed more than 500 inmates from a
local prison. They also attacked the nearby town of Saut d’Eau, considered
sacred by the thousands of Haitians who travel there yearly for a
Vodou-Catholic pilgrimage.
Gangs also have seized
more control in Port-au-Prince, killing more than 260 people in Kenscoff and
Carrefour earlier this year. The U.N. political mission in Haiti noted that it
took the country’s military, police and a U.N.-backed mission led by Kenyan
police roughly five hours to respond to those attacks.
Hunger
also has surged to record levels as a result of the persistent gang violence,
with more than half of Haiti’s population expected to experience severe hunger
through June, and 8,400 people living in makeshift shelters projected to starve .