PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haiti's Justice Ministry called Tuesday for a boost in security for Prime Minister Garry Conille and other Cabinet officials in response to unspecified threats that they could be targeted by malicious parties.
The ministry did not provide details other than to say it had ''consistent and persistent'' information that the top officials might be targeted by unnamed actors intent on sowing ''trouble and panic in the country.'' The ministry urged police and judicial authorities to take ''appropriate measures'' to guarantee the officials' safety.
Neither judicial authorities nor the office of the prime minister returned messages for comment.
The statement from the Justice Ministry comes as gang violence ramps up in certain neighborhoods of Haiti's capital that aren't already under gang control, just months after a U.N.-backed mission led by Kenyan police began. More than 4,000 people have been left homeless in the recent attacks targeting communities in Port-au-Prince including Solino and Tabarre 27.
The escalation in violence began nearly a week ago and is blamed on a gang coalition called ''Viv Ansanm,'' which was responsible for large-scale attacks that began in February targeting critical government infrastructur e. Those attacks led to the eventual resignation of former Prime Minister Ariel Henry.
''Haiti's politics and violence are deeply interconnected," said Diego Da Rin, a Haiti analyst with the International Crisis Group, who added that the allegations of threats against the current Haitian leaders were ''serious and demand swift action.''
"Times of escalating governance crises have often coincided with a rise in armed group activity,'' Da Rin said.
Gang attacks also were reported in the coastal town of Arcahaie, located northwest of Port-au-Prince, and in the central town of Estere, where gunmen opened fire near a school this week, killing at least one parent and injuring a student. Estere is located just north of Pont-Sondé, where a gang killed at least 115 people this month, marking one of Haiti's biggest massacres in recent history.