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Violence escalated near the Maternity Isaïe Jeanty in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, with bullets hitting the walls.   

A woman who was seeking refuge within the hospital compound was shot in the leg by a stray bullet. 

MSF has been supporting the rehabilitation of the hospital, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, to provide sexual and reproductive health services, including emergency obstetric surgery.
Outside the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity hospital in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, where bullets have hit the walls. Haiti, June 2026.
© MSF

MSF suspends operations at the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity hospital in Haiti amid violence

Outside the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity hospital in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, where bullets have hit the walls. Haiti, June 2026.
© MSF
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Port-au-Prince — Since the night of 13–14 June, violence has been escalating around the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity hospital, which is supported by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Caught in the crossfire and facing an untenable situation, our teams have been forced to suspend their medical activities today. Access to sexual and reproductive healthcare, which is already extremely limited in the area, is now almost non-existent. Thousands of people, particularly women, are unable to seek safe medical care.

For the past five days, violent clashes between several armed groups have been taking place in the neighbourhoods of Belekou, Fort‑Dimanche, and Wharf Jérémie. Gunfire continues, hitting the walls of the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity hospital in the Chancerelles neighborhood and triggering displacement and panic among the community.

On the evening of 15 June, more than a hundred people – mostly women and children – fleeing the fighting sought refuge and access to water inside the maternity hospital. One woman was injured in the leg by a stray bullet inside the hospital grounds and was stabilised by our teams on site. The MSF hospital in Tabarre also treated people injured following the clashes in the area.

Following further escalation in the fighting, the authorities were forced to suspend activities the next morning. MSF continued to provide emergency care, patient stabilisation and referrals for several days, but we were then forced to evacuate our staff and suspend all activities on the morning of 19 June. 

View of a courtyard inside the Maternity Isaïe Jeanty, the only public maternity hospital in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

MSF has been supporting its rehabilitation, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, to provide sexual and reproductive health services, including obstetric surgery.
View of a courtyard inside the Maternity Isaïe Jeanty, the only public maternity hospital in Cité Soleil, Port-au-Prince. MSF has been supporting its rehabilitation, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, to provide sexual and reproductive health services, including obstetric surgery. Haiti, June 2026.
Alexandre Marcou/MSF

“We have tried to provide a minimum level of lifesaving support to people with a reduced team and limited capacity,” says Nicholas Tessier, MSF head of mission in Haiti. “We treated several women who managed to reach the maternity hospital despite the insecurity, including one who gave birth to twins. But today we can no longer continue: the hospital is riddled with bullet holes, our teams are exhausted, and it has become extremely difficult for ambulances to refer patients and find facilities able to receive them.”

In Cité Soleil, home to around 300,000 people, access to healthcare for women is almost non‑existent. Many are forced to give birth in precarious conditions at home, significantly increasing the risk of obstetric complications.

The suspension of activities at the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity hospital, caused by this latest surge in violence, further worsens an already critical situation. Women now have almost no options left to receive care.

MSF had already been forced to temporarily suspend activities at our hospital in in Cité Soleil, located a few kilometres from the maternity hospital, in May. As the security situation continues to deteriorate, the entire health system in the area is under threat.

It is essential that armed actors respect civilians and that health facilities are protected at all costs so that medical teams can treat those in need.