PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Veteran Associated Press videographer Pierre-Richard Luxama was filming a tactical police unit patrolling Haiti's capital Monday when some of the gang members who control almost the entire city attacked.
They set the armored police vehicle's roof ablaze with Molotov cocktails, filling it with smoke. The officers returned fire, sending the gang running. The vehicle returned to base, and a group of civilians and police officers sprinted over to throw water on the roof.
For nearly two decades, Luxama and colleague Dánica Coto in San Juan, Puerto Rico, have been covering Haiti's disintegration into even-greater chaos. At least 5.7 million Haitians are at the crisis level, with 1.9 million of those facing emergency levels of hunger. Journalists in Haiti are under attack like never before, dodging bullets as they document the downfall of the capital.
A day after the attack, Luxama recounted his experience and a series of images from the patrol that may never leave him: A severed arm and a leg tied to an electrical wire hanging in front of an abandoned and looted store. Streets full of trash and buildings demolished, without doors or windows. Neighborhoods emptied by residents' profound fear of a powerful gang.
Gang violence has displaced 1.4 million people in recent years despite efforts by the Haitian police and a U.N.-backed police mission, with another one promised.
In downtown Port-au-Prince, Luxama remembered, ''You only hear the birds singing.''
What was it like coming under fire?
On the day of the attack, Luxama said, ''We took off around 10:30 a.m. (and) two hours into the patrol, we were attacked with Molotov cocktails ... along the capital's main thoroughfare.