Video shows mob capturing Haiti president’s bloodied ‘assassins’

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Dramatic video captured the moment a Haitian mob captured two alleged Colombian assassins, beat them and dragged them bloodied through the streets of Port-au-Prince after President Jovenel Moïse was gunned down.

A video shared on social media shows the crowd pulling two men, one of whom was shirtless and bound with a rope, in the neighborhood of Petion-Ville, near the late president’s private residence.

“Advance, advance!” someone is heard yelling on the video as the crowd pushes the two men, who were discovered hiding in some bushes.

Some people grabbed the two by their shirts and pants, pushed them and occasionally slapped them.

Another video on Twitter shows police hauling the suspects off. The user said the men had been attacked with machetes.

Locals drag the suspected assassins through the streets of Petion-Ville, Haiti.
Locals band together and drag the suspected assassins through the streets of Petion-Ville, Haiti.

An Associated Press journalist saw officers put the men in the back of a pickup and drive away as the crowd ran after them to a police station.

“They killed the president! Give them to us! We’re going to burn them!” people shouted outside.

The violent crowd later set fire to several cars riddled with bullet holes that they believed belonged to the assailants. The vehicles didn’t have license plates, and inside one was an empty box of bullets and some water.

A suspected participant in the assassination of Jovenel Moïse sits bloodied in police custody.
A suspected participant in the assassination of Jovenel Moïse sits bloodied in police custody.
Jean Marc Herve Abelard/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Police officers guard a group of suspects of having participated in the assassination of the Haitian President, Jovenel Moïse, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Police officers guard a group of suspects in the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Jean Marc Herve Abelard/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Some of the people in the crowd said even though they had issues with police, they could not accept the fact that foreigners had entered their country and killed the president, the Miami Herald reported.

Mathias Pierre, a government minister, said reinforcements had been brought in because locals were “very mad and trying to get to them, to burn them,” the Times of London reported.

Leon Charles, interim director of the Haitian national police, appealed to Haitians not to take the law into their own hands.

Suspects in the assassination of Haiti's President Jovenel Moise
A Haitian government minister reportedly said locals were “trying to burn” the suspects.
AP/Joseph Odelyn

He said five of the vehicles used by the suspects had been recovered but three of them had been set ablaze.

“I told them to stop. We need evidence,” he said, according to the news outlet.

Although the men who carried out the attack were “in hand,” he said, police needed to find those who were behind it.


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