Kidnappers have released a Belgian businessman who was grabbed as he
drove through Haiti's capital, a U.N. police official said Friday.
Philippe Van Reybrouck, a longtime Haiti resident,
had been in captivity for about 24 hours and was freed in good condition
Thursday after a ransom was paid, said Michel Martin, the Canadian chief of the
U.N.'s criminal
intelligence unit in Haiti.
"The victim was released without any bodily harm,"
Martin said. "There was some stress and shock."
A lull in crime that followed Haiti's devastating
Jan. 12 earthquake is giving way to signs of growing insecurity. Eight
kidnappings have been reported so far this month, up from two in all of
February, according to U.N. statistics.
Aid groups that flocked to Haiti following the quake imposed dusk
curfews following the kidnapping earlier this month of two European aid
workers for Doctors Without Borders. The two women were released after
five days.
Haitian police have also been targeted, with at least
four officers killed since the quake that allowed more than 5,000
prisoners to escape from collapsed or damaged jails.
Morgue records at the General Hospital show a dramatic increase in
fatal shootings across Port-au-Prince
since last month. But authorities say the situation is under control.
"It's too early to say that it's going to get worse,"
said Gary Desrosiers, a spokesman for Haiti's national police.
In the most recent kidnapping, assailants grabbed Van
Reybrouck and contacted his family with a ransom demand. Martin said
Haitian police were handling the investigation.
Once rare in Haiti, kidnappings soared in the chaos
that followed the 2004 ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The
bandits often targeted foreigners, but Haitians were taken in much larger numbers.
By the time of the earthquake, crackdowns by U.N. and
Haitian police had dramatically curbed the number of kidnappings. The
crime is still below pre-disaster levels. The eight kidnappings reported
this month by the U.N. compare with 13 last March.
Some aid groups say desperation is to blame for the
rising violence, with hundreds
of thousands of Haitians still homeless more than two months
after the quake.
"If we don't provide adequate shelter and food and
sanitation for people and allow them to start focusing on their
livelihoods, the security situation is going to worsen," said Joia Mukherjee, medical
director for the nonprofit Partners in Health.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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