PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Six nuns were kidnapped Friday in Haiti as they traveled on a bus through the capital, according to religious leaders.
The nuns were accompanied by an undetermined number of unidentified people on the bus who also were kidnapped, according to a statement by the Haitian Conference of the Religious. It said the nuns are from the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Anne.
The congregation didn’t respond to messages for comment. It wasn’t immediately known who was responsible for Friday’s kidnappings, although gangs that control an estimated 80% of Port-au-Prince have been blamed for thousands of abductions.
The conference said that too many kidnappings are occurring in Haiti and filling people’s souls “with sadness and fear.”
Last year, about 3,000 people were reported kidnapped, according to U.N. statistics.
The nuns are the latest high-profile kidnapping victims reported in Haiti. In late November, renowned Haitian Dr. Douglas Pape was abducted in Port-au-Prince. He has yet to be released despite multiple ransoms being paid, according to local media reports.
In October 2021, 17 members of a U.S. religious organization were kidnapped and later freed, some after two months in captivity.
2025-01-13 01:59563 view
2025-01-13 01:241154 view
2025-01-13 00:53340 view
2025-01-13 00:53298 view
2025-01-13 00:282823 view
2025-01-12 23:541908 view
TAIPEI — Beijing has unveiled a new tactic on Taiwan, the democratic island it claims as its own, of
Washington — While focused on plans to deter illegal border crossings, the ongoing immigration negot
The trial of a woman charged in connection with the 2019 killing of mother-of-five Jennifer Dulos be