Bel Air massacre
The Bel Air massacre was a series of shootings, extrajudicial killings, and massacres that took place in the Bel Air neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti between August 2020 and May 2021. Between August and October 2020, G9 An Fanmi e Alye members attacked Bel Air residents, with continued attacks by the affiliated Krache Dife gang. The massacres died down until March 31, whenever renewed attacks began, sparking battles with Bel Air residents who defended themselves.
Prelude
Bel Air is situated in northern Port-au-Prince, under the control of G9 Family and Allies, a group of several gangs headed by Jimmy Chérizier. On November 4, 2019, prior to the creation of G9, Bel Air was the site of a massacre perpetrated by Haitian authorities to crack down on anti-government protests. Haitian authorities barricaded parts of the neighborhood and set fire to it, killing twenty-nine civilians. Following the massacre, police gangs controlled the Bel Air neighborhood, one of which formed to become G9 An Fanmi e Alye.In June 2020, Bel Air residents were under further stress after pressure by G9 to be fully integrated into the G9 area of control. They resisted, however, and tensions escalated.
Massacre
Initial mass attacks (August 27-September 19)
The conflict began on August 27, 2020, when a man named Michael Saieh was assassinated by unknown gunmen. The gunmen then made their way to Port-au-Prince Cathedral, and shot a police officer nearby. The officer responded, killing a member of the Krache Dife Base, one of the gangs in G9. In response to the shooting, Jimmy "Barbecue" Chérizier ordered G9 to back Krache Dife in a reprisal attack, beginning on the evening of August 27 and continuing until August 31. On August 31, three groups of gangs, spearheaded by Barbecue, attacked the Bel Air neighborhood, forcing many residents to flee to the Champs-De-Mars neighborhood. The residents were forced to return the next day, however, due to public outcry from other civilians. Later, the Haitian Prime Minister Joseph Jouthe stated that Haitian authorities didn't intervene for fear of "collateral victims."G9 launched another incursion into Bel Air on September 2, shooting indiscriminately into houses. Meanwhile, the gang leader for Simon Pele, a gang affiliated with G9, was arrested by Haitian police in another area of Port-au-Prince that same day, ending the Bel Air incursion early. On September 10, Haitian police stated that they blocked an attempt by G9 to attack Bel Air once again, and that some gang members were injured in the skirmish. By then, 20 civilians had been killed in the attacks, and many Bel Air civilians had taken up arms against the gangs.
A September 19 attack by G9 was repulsed by civilians, who threw rocks and stones at gang members below them. Three gang members were killed, and eight were injured. However, the Nan Barozi gang attacked Bel Air residents over the next two days, causing an unknown number of casualties.