News
From Miami to Port-au-Prince to Washington, Catholic voices offer sobering insight and a sliver of hope for Haiti’s future.
Escalating gang violence and displacement continue to drive humanitarian needs in Haiti, the UN said on Wednesday.
An additional 15,000 people in Haiti fled their communities after armed attacks in the communes of Dessalines and Verrettes ...
The current food crisis is grave, with at least 115,000 children in Haiti expected to suffer from life-threatening malnutrition this year — a 30% increase over 2022.
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says escalating violence and displacement continue to create ...
To provide crisis-affected girls and boys around the world with access to quality, holistic education, Education Cannot Wait and its partners, including UNICEF, are calling on world leaders to ...
Even before Haiti’s devastating Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake damaged and destroyed thousands of schools, the country’s education system was already in ruins.
Lovenska, 7, one of over 170,000 displaced children in Haiti, stays safe at a UNICEF-supported Child-Friendly Space in Delmas 6, downtown Port-au-Prince. "My family and I had to rush to the ...
Editor’s Note: Catherine Russell is the executive director of UNICEF and principal advocate on Haiti for the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, a collective body of senior humanitarian leaders.
Many in Haiti say resources are limited, especially adequate health care. Elms College in Chicopee started a nurse educator program 3 years ago and continues the course through Zoom.
As the food and gang crisis in Haiti worsen, the majority of Haitians in a recent poll say they favor the deployment of an international force and do not think the country’s politicians or civil ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results