PONT-SONDÉ, Haiti — Under the cover of night, dozens of gang members crept toward the small town of Pont-Sondé in central Haiti armed with knives and assault rifles as families slept.
The gang had traveled from nearby Savien in vehicles they ditched halfway through the trip, climbing into canoes for the last stretch for a quiet approach.
Gunfire and screams woke the town. Those not shot dead were stabbed. Fires consumed homes.
''They tried to murder everyone,'' said Jina Joseph, who survived.
The Gran Grif gang killed babies and young mothers, older people and entire families, angry that a self-defense group had tried to limit gang activity in Pont-Sondé and prevent it from making money off a makeshift toll it had recently established on a nearby road.
The gang escaped by foot through nearby rice fields after Thursday's attack, leaving more than 70 bodies strewn through the town.
It was the biggest massacre that Haiti's once peaceful central region had seen in recent history. Thousands now face an uncertain future, stripped of their jobs, homes and families.
Jameson Fermilus, who had crouched in a corridor next to his house as smoke and gunfire filled the air, later joined more than 6,000 other survivors who walked for hours, seeking safety.