“All these practices are outrageous and should cease without delay,” UN rights chief Volker Turk stated in a press release.
The report additionally pointed to the so-called “self-defence brigades” set as much as counter the intensifying gang violence, warning that they proceed to take justice into their very own palms.
“People accused of petty crime or suspected of affiliation with gangs continued to be lynched, stoned, mutilated, or burned alive” by such brigades, it stated.
No less than 528 circumstances of lynchings had been reported final yr, together with 18 ladies, in accordance with the report, whereas 59 extra have been reported up to now this yr.
“SHOCKING”
Regardless of a world arms embargo put in place to attempt to stem the violence, the report stated that there was nonetheless a dependable provide of weapons and ammunition flowing throughout Haiti’s “porous borders”.
It referred to as for tighter nationwide and worldwide controls to stem the trafficking of weapons and ammunition to the conflict-torn nation.
“It’s stunning that regardless of the horrific scenario on the bottom, arms preserve nonetheless pouring in,” Turk stated.
“I enchantment for a more practical implementation of the arms embargo.”
Thursday’s report additionally reiterated the necessity for an pressing deployment of a Multinational Safety Help mission to assist Haiti’s police cease the violence and defend the inhabitants.
Kenya, which agreed to guide a long-awaited, UN-approved mission to Haiti to again its safety forces as they grapple with the well-armed gangs, has put its plans on maintain till the transitional council is in place.
As soon as the mission is established, Turk harassed that it could be “important” that it “successfully integrates human rights into the conduct of its operations and establishes a compliance mechanism to mitigate and minimise hurt”.
The rights workplace report additionally emphasised that enhancing safety alone wouldn’t convey long-lasting options to Haiti’s woes, stressing the necessity for insurance policies aimed toward restoring the rule of regulation.
“Widespread corruption and dysfunction of the justice system vastly contribute to the pervasive impunity for grave human rights violations,” Turk stated.
“They have to be addressed urgently.”