Civilians in Haiti are caught in deadly, escalating violence

Many people have lost access to medical care amid a territorial conflict between armed groups and the police.

Armed men exchange fire with police forces in the Bel Air neighborhood of Port-au-Prince

Armed men exchange fire with police in the Bel Air neighborhood of Port-au-Prince on March 19. | Haiti 2024 © Corentin Fohlen

As Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, sinks deeper into a crisis marked by violent clashes between armed groups and police forces, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reports a rise in the number of civilian casualties arriving at its facilities, highlighting the impact of this violence on the availability of health care in the capital.

Nearly two in five Haitians are in urgent need of medical care due to widespread insecurity and violence, while 60 to 80 percent of Port-au-Prince’s health facilities are closed or non-functional for the same reasons.

Between January and June 2025, MSF teams assisted 2,600 survivors of sexual violence, admitted 13,300 patients to emergency rooms and treated 2,267 people for traumatic injuries from violence. Among those with traumatic injuries, 26 percent were minors, compared to 11 percent in 2024. Most minors were under the age of 15, and one-third were girls. Thirty percent of all minors admitted for violence-related injuries suffered gunshot wounds.

Violence in Port-au-Prince
Destruction in Port-au-Prince from street fighting. | Haiti 2024 © Corentin Fohlen

“These figures reflect the alarming deterioration of the situation in Haiti, where civilians, including women and children, are increasingly exposed to danger every day,” said Mumuza Muhindo Musubaho, MSF head of mission in Haiti. “Civilians must be spared by the parties to this conflict.”

On September 20, 17 wounded people were treated at the MSF hospital in Drouillard following a drone attack carried out the same day in the Cité Soleil neighborhood. Among these patients, were two men who were already dead on arrival, another man who died while being transferred, 10 women—one of whom died en route to MSF’s trauma hospital in Tabarre—and three children who tragically did not survive their injuries. Two more women injured in this attack died at the nearby Isaïe Jeanty Maternity Hospital, where MSF is also working.

Man walks on crutches in a hospital hallways.
Roodney was involved in a serious accident, after he swerved his motorcycle taxi to avoid a car fleeing the police. | Haiti 2024 © MSF

Civilians are trapped in a violent conflict 

Haitian civilians are on the front lines of a territorial conflict in many areas of Port-au-Prince. They are trapped between the threat of explosive drones and the brutal violence of armed groups that loot and burn homes, destroy neighborhoods, terrorize communities, and increasingly use sexual violence as a weapon of control, punishment, and extortion.

On average, about 18 percent of patients followed through MSF’s primary health care project in neighborhoods controlled by armed groups report that they avoid using public transportation to reach medical facilities outside these areas, fearing they might be targeted.

The restricted movement of residents, combined with the widespread closure of hospitals since 2024 due to armed attacks, looting, the exodus of medical staff, and difficulties in supplying medicines, has drastically reduced and centralized the availability of health care, leaving a large share of the population without access to vital services.

Brooklyn, a neighborhood in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Brooklyn, a neighborhood in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, is one of Haiti's most vulnerable areas, and its residents face extreme poverty, precarious housing, and limited access to health care. | Haiti 2024 © Quentin Bruno/MSF

Remaining medical facilities are overwhelmed by patients 

This situation also places extreme pressure on the facilities that remain operational, notably MSF’s trauma hospital in Tabarre, which has increased its bed capacity by 50 percent, with 26 percent of trauma cases linked to violence. Only one major public hospital is still functioning in the capital, Hôpital Universitaire de la Paix, and it is regularly overwhelmed.

Civilians must be spared by the parties to this conflict.

Mumuza Muhindo Musubaho, MSF head of mission in Haiti

“This devastating context fuels a profound sense of abandonment among Haitians,” added Musubaho. “And, it must be said, the severe decline in health care availability—a crisis within the crisis—also leaves the few remaining humanitarian and medical actors being overwhelmed by ever-growing needs.”

MSF remains fully committed to supporting the Haitian population and works closely with the Ministry of Public Health and Population. It is imperative that civilians, health care workers, and medical facilities be protected.