The Director General of the UN Service for Migration has called on the international community to provide assistance to over a million uprooted due to gang violence in Haiti.

“This is one of the most complex and urgent crises in the world that has an impact on regional and international stability.”stressed by the head of the International Organization for Migration (IMO), Amy Poopcompleting her visit to the country, according to a press release made public by her services.

More than a million citizens have been forced to be displaced in Haiti, a number that has tripled over a year. Gangs’ violence, especially in the capital, Port-O-Prenz, forced tens of thousands of families to flee, many repeatedly.

“At the same time, almost 200,000 Haitians were deported in the last year by region countries”the IOM stressed in his announcement.

In the US, Donald Trump’s government is seeking to revoke the legal status of half a million and more expulsion -protected immigrants, including thousands of Haitians – a venture that prevented justice Monday.

In the field, the IMU manages somewhere fifty camps internal displaced, including many ‘In areas affected by violence’according to his announcement.

Ms Pope tells what she heard in her meetings with families in the capital port-o-prince. “Mother told me she had to leave her neighborhood three times in two months. She lives under a cloth with her children, without having where to go »he stressed.

“Haitians need support – and they need it now. The cost of inaction will be paid not only with human lives but also in the form of instability that will hurt us all. “warned by the Director General of the IOM.

At least 1,518 people were murdered and another 572 were injured in the first three months of the year due to gang violence, order of force enforcement and actions of citizens who self -sufficient and in some cases have formed paramilitary organizations, according to UN data.