Gangsters make life difficult for police in Haiti.

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian gangsters have seized at least three police vehicles, including two armored ones, amid a wave of gang violence that does not even spare the Caribbean country’s police officers, counting dozens of victims in their ranks.

A high-ranking police officer told HCNN that a police armored vehicle was seized, on the night of October 12 -13, by armed bandits controlling the Martissant slum area in the capital Port-au-Prince.

“An armored vehicle and several police weapons were hijacked and are still in the hands of the criminals who are still using them to fight rival gangs,” the police source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told HCNN on Friday.

“As a police commissioner, I feel embarrassed and guilty because I am among those who are supposed to make sure that gang violence is quelled and that security is guaranteed,” he said, noting that he has often considered submitting his resignation but has been advised by many of his friends and allies not to do so.

One gang leader, known as Crisla, a former policeman, has claimed responsibility for the move to seize the police armored vehicle and several weapons.

“My men and I made a move because we had learned that a group of evil people were about to attack the police, so we said we were not going to let that happen,” said Crystal in a voice message released on social media.

“Because if that had happened, those guys would have used the police materials to terrorize the population further,” stated Crisla, who says he is a protector of the Haitian people.

In an earlier statement, the gang leader had promised to return everything they took from the police, but that promise has not been kept.

Crystal has often engaged in fierce and deadly fights with a rival gang led by Ti Lapli over attempts to expand their respective territories.

Another feared gang – based at Canaan, a makeshift housing community set up after the 2010 earthquake – also seized, on November 12, a police armored vehicle they later set on fire.

“We are asking any police officer who would hear this message to alert CRO (Intelligence and Operations Center),” a policeman had said in a voice message from a hiding place.

“Tell them we’ve been ambushed and need backup now. There are people throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails at us. We are still resisting, but we need reinforcement now,” the police officer said.

A spokesman for the Haitian National Police Union (known as SYNAPOHA), Lionel Lazare, said at least 50 policemen had been shot dead since the beginning of the year. The police commissioner in charge of the police academy, Harington Rigaud, was among the victims.

Rigaud, 50, was shot in the head, outside his office, on November 25. The case is now being investigated. The victim’s vehicle was taken away by the criminals.

Lazare called on the government and the police high command to “urgently take appropriate measures to make sure the perpetrators are brought to justice and to ensure the safety and well-being of all police officers.”

Crystal and several other gang leaders have been the subject of wanted notices or arrest warrants. Still, police officers have not been able to execute them because they cannot set foot into the dangerous slum areas.

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