Haiti is facing a severe humanitarian crisis as armed groups control large areas of Port-au-Prince, displacing more than 1.4 million people and cutting off access to essential services such as food, health care, water, and education. Half of the population is experiencing food insecurity, with child malnutrition rising sharply. Humanitarian efforts are severely hampered by insecurity and blocked access routes, leaving millions without life-saving assistance.
According to the UN, six million of Haiti’s approximately 11.4 million residents require some form of humanitarian aid in 2026. The UN’s 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan seeks $880 million to assist 4.2 million of the most vulnerable people, providing emergency food, shelter, protection, health, and education services. Without sufficient funding, critical operations such as nutrition programs for children and protection services for women and girls cannot reach all those in need.
Violence by armed groups has forced 12 percent of the population to flee their homes, leaving children without access to education, healthcare, or safe living conditions. The UN emphasizes that adequate funding is crucial not only to save lives but also to stabilize communities torn apart by violence and displacement. UN officials, including Nicole Boni Kouassi and Secretary-General António Guterres, have highlighted Haiti as underfunded and in urgent need of international support.
Cuts to humanitarian services have severely affected food security, water distribution, primary healthcare, education, and protection programs. Aid delivery is complicated by areas controlled by gangs, forcing agencies to use alternative methods such as transporting supplies by boat. Despite the massive scale of need, Haiti remains one of the least funded crises globally, with only 24 percent of its 2025 appeal met, and the 2026 appeal is less than four percent funded.
The lack of funding not only jeopardizes immediate humanitarian operations but also risks broader regional instability. Unchecked violence and displacement may drive irregular migration, strain neighboring countries, and undermine regional economic and security cooperation. Prolonged instability also increases the risk of secondary crises, including public health emergencies and cross-border crime, affecting the wider Caribbean and Americas.
The UN’s 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan calls on governments and partners to increase financial commitments and improve access, aiming to expand food support, restore essential services, protect vulnerable groups, and create pathways for longer-term recovery. However, without increased funding and security improvements, millions of Haitians are likely to face worsening conditions, deepening the humanitarian crisis.







