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Haitians struggle to survive, searching for food, water and safety as gang violence chokes the capital

“Every day I wake up and find a dead body,” said Noune-Carme Manoune, an immigration officer.

Life in Port-au-Prince has become a game of survival, pushing Haitians to new limits as they try to stay safe and alive, while gangs overwhelm police and the government remains largely absent. Some install metal barricades. Others hit the gas hard as they drive near gang-controlled areas. The few who can afford it are stockpiling water, food, money and medicine, supplies of which have dwindled since the main international airport closed in early March. The country’s largest seaport has been largely paralyzed by marauding gangs.

“People living in the capital are locked up, with nowhere to go,” Philippe Branchat, head of the International Organization for Migration in Haiti, said in a recent statement. “The capital is surrounded by armed groups and danger. It is a city under siege.”

Phones often ping with warnings of gunfire, kidnappings and deadly shootings, and some supermarkets have so many armed guards that they resemble small police stations.

Gang attacks used to only occur in certain areas, but now they can happen anywhere, anytime. Staying home doesn’t guarantee safety: A man playing with his daughter at home was shot in the back by a stray bullet. Others have been killed.

Schools and gas stations are closed and fuel is sold on the black market for $9 a gallon, about three times the official price. Banks have banned customers from withdrawing more than a hundred dollars a day, and checks that used to take three days now take a month or more to clear. Police officers have to wait weeks for their payout.

“Everyone is under stress,” says Isidore Gédéon, a 38-year-old musician. “After the prison escape, people don’t trust anyone anymore. The state has no control.”

Gangs that control an estimated 80 percent of Port-au-Prince launched coordinated attacks on February 29, targeting critical state infrastructure. They set fire to police stations, shot up the airport and stormed Haiti’s two largest prisons, freeing more than 4,000 prisoners.

At the time, Prime Minister Ariel Henry was visiting Kenya to push for the UN-backed deployment of a police force. Henry remains locked out of Haiti, and a presidential transition council charged with selecting the country’s next prime minister and cabinet could be sworn in as soon as this week. Henry has pledged to resign once a new leader is installed.

Few believe this will end the crisis. It’s not just the gangs unleashing violence; Haitians have embraced a vigilante movement known as “bwa kale” that has killed hundreds of suspected gang members or their associates.

“There are certain communities where I can’t go because everyone is afraid of everyone,” Gédéon said. “You can be innocent and end up dead.”

In one month alone, more than 95,000 people have fled Port-au-Prince as gangs invade communities, burn homes and kill people in areas controlled by their rivals.

Those fleeing by bus to Haiti’s southern and northern regions risk being raped or killed as they pass through gang-controlled areas where gunmen have opened fire.

According to the IOM, the violence in the capital has left about 160,000 people homeless.

“This is hell,” says Nelson Langlois, producer and cinematographer.

Langlois, his wife and three children spent two nights on the roof of their house as gangs invaded the neighborhood.

“Over and over again we watched it to see when we could escape,” he remembers.

Forced to separate due to the lack of shelter, Langlois lives in a Vodou temple and his wife and children are elsewhere in Port-au-Prince.

Like most people in the city, Langlois usually stays indoors. Long gone are the days of football matches on dusty roads and nights drinking Prestige beer in bars playing hip-hop, reggae or African music.

“It’s an open-air prison,” Langlois said.

The European Union last week announced the launch of a humanitarian airlift from the Central American country of Panama to Haiti. Five flights landed in the northern city of Cap-Haïtien, Haiti’s only functioning airport, carrying 62 tons of medicine, water, emergency shelter equipment and other essential supplies.

But there is no guarantee that critical items will get to those who need them most. Many Haitians are still trapped in their homes, unable to buy or forage for food amid whizzing bullets.

Aid agencies say nearly 2 million Haitians are on the brink of famine, including more than 600,000 children.

Neighbors erected a metal fence as they worked to install it as a barricade against gangs in Port-au-Prince’s Petion-Ville neighborhood.Ramon Espinosa/Associated Press

Yet people find ways to survive.

Back in the neighborhood where residents are installing a metal barricade, sparks fly as a man cuts metal while others shovel and mix cement. They are well on their way and hope to complete the project soon.

Others remain skeptical, citing reports of gangs jumping into loaders and other heavy equipment to tear down police stations and, more recently, metal barricades.