Mr. Senior gave an example of a 16-year-old girl who left the house to go shopping and then confiscated armed men. She was beaten, addicts and repeatedly raped.
According to him, she was kept about a month until the gang released her when they realized that her family had no money to pay ransom. Establishment abductions are often found in Haiti.
She is now in the UN asylum with dozens of other girls who receive help.
The gang control in the Port-PRIN led to an almost complete rupture of law enforcement, the collapse of medical services and the onset of food security.
Last year alone, more than 5,600 people were killed in Haiti.
The Haiti transitional Council, a body created to organize elections and renewable democratic order, appears to be in the absence.
The Council replaced the Provisional Prime Minister in November, but has made little progress against the organization long delay.
Children also recruit gangs, sometimes forcibly, UNICEF said.
The organization collided with members of the children’s gang over eight.
The basics needed by the children of Haiti need ordinary childhood, even if they are still at home with their families, practically no UNICEF. Schools and hospitals practically do not work, and tens of thousands of children are not at school.
UNICEF has created mobile safe spaces on Haiti to try to support children and prevent sexual abuse.
But last year, when he applied for $ 221.4 million (£ 177.8 million) to finance Haiti’s work, he got just a quarter of it.
Now they are afraid that with the US freezing on foreign aid, affecting humanitarian projects around the world, Haiti’s needs will be neglected again.