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France 24
France 24
World
NEWS WIRES

American nurse and young daughter released by Haitian kidnappers

This undated handout photograph provided by El Roi Haiti on July 31, 2023 shows Alix Dorsainvil with her husband Sandro Dorsainvil, founder and director of El Roi Academy & Institution Mixte. © AFP PHOTO / EL ROI

Kidnappers in Haiti released a US nurse and her daughter Wednesday, nearly two weeks after they were snatched at gunpoint from the campus of a Christian-run school near Port-au-Prince, underscoring the severe security risks for visitors to a capital city largely controlled by gangs.

The July 27 abduction of Alix Dorsainvil and her child happened the very day the US State Department warned US citizens to leave “as soon as possible” and ordered the departure of nonemergency US government personnel from Haiti because of security concerns. The country remains under a US “do not travel” advisory.

In the days following the kidnapping, El Roi Haiti, the Christian group founded by Dorsainvil’s husband, asked people to pray and said it was working on their safe return.

Hope waned among some. Gang warfare has increasingly plagued Haiti since the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse. Gang members regularly kill, rape and hold residents for ransom. Some are held for months. A local nonprofit has documented 539 kidnappings since January , a significant rise over previous years for the country of more than 11 million people.

On Wednesday, El Roi Haiti confirmed the New Hampshire mother and daughter's safe release “with a heart of gratitude and immense joy.” The US State Department issued a statement thanking its Haitian and U.S. interagency partners for facilitating the release. Neither gave any further details, including whether a ransom was paid.

“We have no greater priority than the safety and security of US citizens overseas,” the department said. “As you can imagine, these individuals have been through a very difficult ordeal, both physically and mentally.”

In a brief conversation with The Associated Press, El Roi Haiti said it would comment further in coming days but asked for patience “as the community processes and heals.” The organisation issued a statement asking that no one try to contact Dorsainvil and her family.

A sigh of relief

Meanwhile, Haitians living near the group's campus erupted in relief and smiles when they heard the news.

“Thank you, God!” Fredline Valcourt said. “She’s our mother in the area. If we have any problems, we don’t need to go anywhere else. She would take care of us.”

Louitesse Desumer said she had gone to church to pray for their freedom. "We don’t want them to leave the country,” she said, as she raised her hands in thanks for the release.

The Christian group has offered medical care, education and other basic services to people in the country’s poorest areas.

In a blog post, El Roi Haiti said Dorsainvil fell in love with Haiti’s people on a visit there after the devastating 2010 earthquake hit the Caribbean nation. In a video posted on the organisation's website, Dorsainvil describes Haitians as “full of joy, and life and love,” people she was blessed to know.

Dorsainvil graduated from Regis College in Weston, Massachusetts, where a program supports nursing education in Haiti.

The college's president, Antoinette Hays, said the community was relieved to hear of the safe release of Dorsainvil and her daughter. "We send our prayers and continued support to her family and friends as they begin the healing process from this experience.”

(AP)

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