Events in the year 2021 in Haiti.
Incumbents
Events
Ongoing â COVID-19 pandemic in Haiti
January to March
- January 14 â Hundreds demonstrate in Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haïtien, Jacmel, Saint-Marc, and Gonaïves against President Jovenel Moïse. Most of the demonstrations are peaceful, but some violence is reported.
- February 1 â President Jovenel Moïse says he will stay on until February 22 and urges people to support proposed Constitutional amendments. Opposition leaders step up demands he step down and a transportation strike cripples the country.
- February 7 â Justice Minister Rockefeller Vincent say that a planned assassination of Moïse and an attempted coup d'état were frustrated. Twenty-three are arrested.
- February 8 â Judge Joseph Mécène Jean-Louis, 72, is named to lead the opposition to Moïse.
- February 10 â Police use tear gas and shoot into the air to disperse a rock-throwing crowd of protesters. Twenty-three people are arrested and two journalists are injured during the incident. Protesters shout, "We are back to dictatorship! Down with Moise! Down with Sison," a reference to the U.S. Ambassador, Michele J. Sison, who supports Moïse.
- February 25 â At least 25 dead and many injured during a prison break at Croix-des-Bouquets Civil Prison, during which notorious gang leader Arnel Joseph escaped. Joseph is later found and killed in L'Estère.
- February 28 â Thousands wave tree branches and flags in protests against kidnappings and Moïse.
- March 2 â Haitian-born former U.S. marine Jacques Duroseau is sentenced to five years of prison for smuggling guns to Haiti in 2019.
- March 5 â Lissner Mathieu ("Ti-Nwa"), a U.S. national, and Peterson Benjamin ("Ti Peter Vilaj"), a Haitian national, are extradited to the United States. Mathieu, 55, is accused on drug charges, and Benjamin, a leader of the Village de Dieu gang, faces kidnapping charges.
- March 24 â The Supreme Court orders the release of those accused of plotting a coup d'état.
- March 28 â Thousands take to the streets in Port-au-Prince and other cities to reject a proposed referendum to introduce a new constitution.
April to June
- April 2 â Fighting in Bel Air leads to the burning of houses and at least three deaths. Jimmy "Barbecue" Chérizier, pro-government leader of the â³G-9 and Family and Allies coalitionâ³ accepts responsibility for the attacks.
- June 8 â Haiti advances to the second round in FIFA World Cup qualifying by defeating Nicaragua (2-1) at Port-au-Prince.
July to September
October to December
- November 12 - Amid escalating turmoil, protests over fuel price hike and gang violence, the US and Canada urge their citizens to leave Haiti.
- December 6 - Three of 17 missionaries who were kidnapped by a street gang in October are released.
- December 14 - Cap-Haïtien fuel tanker explosion
- December 16 - The remaining missionaries who were kidnapped by a street gang in October are released.
Scheduled events
Elections
Holidays
Sports
Deaths
See also
References
External links