Port-au-Prince, January 28, 2026 – Sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) has surged in Haiti’s capital since 2021 and is being used systematically to terrorize the population, with a disproportionate impact on women and girls, according to a report released today by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). This crisis is occurring as infrastructure, public services, and living conditions have deteriorated dramatically amid widespread violence and insecurity.
MSF’s report, Sexual and gender-based violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is based on 10 years of medical data and testimonies collected at MSF’s Pran Men’m clinic. Since MSF opened the clinic in 2015, it has provided comprehensive medical and psychosocial care to nearly 17,000 people, 98% of whom are women and girls.
The report shows that women and girls of all ages are being targeted, and that a growing number of survivors are displaced from their homes, which exposes them to further violence. Nearly one-fifth of the survivors treated at Pran Men’m have suffered multiple incidents of SGBV.
There also been a shocking increase in the brutality of the violence. Among survivors who have received care at Pran Men’m since 2022, 57% reported being assaulted by members of armed groups, often in the context of group assaults committed by multiple perpetrators. More than 100 patients reported being assaulted by 10 or more perpetrators at a time.
The report highlights the persistent shortcomings in the availability of services for survivors MSF is often unable to refer its patients to essential non-medical assistance—such as safe shelters, relocation options, or livelihood support—which are indispensable for many survivors. This situation underscores the urgent need to strengthen and sustain funding for protection services.
Survivors also face numerous barriers—such as fear of stigma, financial difficulties, insecurity, and lack of information—that prevent them from accessing care in a timely manner, which unfortunately has medical consequences. Since 2022, only one-third of survivors who consulted the Pran Men’m clinic arrived at the clinic within three days of their assault: beyond this timeframe, it is no longer possible to prevent HIV transmission. Similarly, 59% of our patients during this period were unable to access care within five days in order to protect themselves from unwanted pregnancy.
This report calls for urgent and coordinated action by Haitian authorities, service providers, donors, United Nations agencies, and security actors in favor of a survivor-centered response focused on long-term recovery.
“We call for expanded access to comprehensive medical and psychosocial care free of charge, which can only be achieved through a sustainable increase in funding for support services,” Manilla Arroyo said. “Equally important, we call for unequivocal recognition of the widespread nature of sexual violence and its deliberate use by armed groups as a tool to control and subjugate women and girls. These are the challenges that must be addressed to empower survivors to regain control of their bodies and their lives.”

