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Canada freezes assets of three Haitian businessmen over gang links

Rose Delpe cries as she shows money next to people displaced by gang war violence in Cite Soleil resting on the streets of Delmas neighbourhood after leaving Hugo Chaves square in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Nov. 19, 2022.
Rose Delpe cries as she shows money next to people displaced by gang war violence in Cite Soleil resting on the streets of Delmas neighbourhood after leaving Hugo Chaves square in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Nov. 19, 2022. Photo by Ralph Tedy Erol /REUTERS

WASHINGTON — Canada’s government said it would freeze any local assets of three high-profile Haitian businessmen accused of supporting the country’s armed gangs, the latest measure targeting those linked to the Caribbean nation’s criminal groups.

The sanctions target Gilbert Bigio, chairman of Haitian industrial conglomerate GB Group, as well as prominent business leaders Reynold Deeb and Sherif Abdallah, the government said.

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“Canada has reason to believe these individuals are using their status as high-profile members of the economic elite in Haiti to protect and enable the illegal activities of armed criminal gangs, including through money laundering and other acts of corruption,” the foreign ministry statement said.

GB Group and the office of Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Reuters was unable to obtain comment from Deeb or Abdallah.

The sanctions add to others already imposed by Ottawa, including on three Haitian politicians in November, and “are intended to put pressure on those responsible for the ongoing violence and instability in Haiti.”

The United States on Friday imposed sanctions on a current and a former Haitian senator, accusing the two politicians of engaging in drug trafficking activities.

Haitian gangs in September created a humanitarian crisis by blocking the entrance to a fuel terminal, leading to shortages of gasoline and diesel that halted most economic activity just as the country reported a renewed outbreak of cholera.

Policymakers in the United States and Canada have this year been increasingly vocal in discussing alleged links between gangs and economic elites.

Two U.S. lawmakers in September said the United States should sanction Haitian gang leaders and the “warlords” who finance them.