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Geopolitics & PoliticsWednesday, June 17, 2026

Guterres Begs Haiti’s Forgiveness as Sudan’s Silent Emergency Deepens

The UN chief offered a rare apology to Haitians for international neglect, while new data showed 21 million Sudanese face acute food insecurity, underscoring a widening gap between global attention and humanitarian need.

In a sweltering former school in Port-au-Prince now crammed with more than 1,250 displaced people, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday did something leaders of his stature rarely do: he asked for forgiveness. “I am sorry,” he told a mother of four who had described nearly two years of living without privacy or safety, her words a distillation of the terror unleashed by Haiti’s gangs. The apology, delivered during a one-day visit, was a stark acknowledgment that the world has failed the Caribbean nation, where surging violence has rendered one in ten Haitians homeless — some 1.5 million people — and claimed at least 2,300 lives this year alone, according to newly released UN figures. Among the recent victims is James Boyard, cabinet director of the defence ministry, kidnapped from one of the capital’s few remaining relatively secure neighbourhoods.

Yet Guterres’s visit was not solely an exercise in contrition. Viewed from Port-au-Prince, it also served as a show of support for an international security mission that is finally taking shape. The Secretary-General inspected elements of a UN-approved Gang Suppression Force, expected to begin operations within weeks, which many Haitians hope will break the armed groups’ stranglehold on the city. But even as that force prepares to deploy, the scale of the challenge is daunting: gangs now control an estimated 80 per cent of the capital, and the national police remain outgunned and under-resourced.

If Haiti’s crisis is acute and visible, Sudan’s is vast and dangerously ignored. Humanitarian officials in Nairobi and Cairo are warning that the war between rival military factions has pushed 33.7 million people into dependence on aid — the highest such figure globally — while more than 14 million have been driven from their homes. In Darfur and Kordofan, the overlap of conflict, displacement and hunger has created what aid workers describe as a “catastrophic” convergence. The Norwegian Refugee Council’s Matilde Fou told Al Ittihad that 21 million Sudanese now face acute food insecurity, with famine conditions already confirmed in some areas. Yet funding for the response is collapsing, forcing impossible choices about who receives help.

From the vantage point of New York and European capitals, the contrast is instructive. Haiti, despite its chronic dysfunction, commands intermittent attention because of its proximity to the United States and the risk of mass migration. Sudan, by contrast, is a crisis that rarely penetrates the global news cycle, even as its humanitarian indicators dwarf those of many higher-profile emergencies. Diplomats note that the UN’s appeal for Sudan is barely a quarter funded, while Haiti’s security mission — backed by Washington and Nairobi — has secured enough pledges to begin deploying. The asymmetry reflects not objective need but geopolitical convenience.

Guterres’s apology in Port-au-Prince may have been directed at Haitians, but it resonates across a fractured international system. With the Gang Suppression Force poised to enter the field, Haiti has at least a fragile pathway toward stability. Sudan, however, has no such prospect. Without a dramatic injection of funding and diplomatic energy, analysts in London and Addis Ababa warn, the country is drifting toward a famine that could eclipse any humanitarian disaster in a generation. The Secretary-General’s words of regret, however heartfelt, will mean little if they are not followed by a reordering of priorities that treats lives in Khartoum and Darfur with the same urgency as those in Port-au-Prince.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

38%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa del Golfo araboStampa latinoamericana
Stampa del Golfo arabo
allarmeurgenza

As global attention lies elsewhere, Sudan sinks into a silent humanitarian catastrophe: 21 million people face acute food insecurity, 33.7 million require aid, and 14 million have been displaced. The international community remains largely inert as the crisis deepens daily.

Stampa latinoamericana
indignazioneurgenza

Visiting Haiti, the UN Secretary-General begged forgiveness from women displaced by gang violence, acknowledging the international community's neglect. The UN warns that Haiti is experiencing the most severe crisis in the Western Hemisphere, with 6.4 million people in need of aid and 1.5 million displaced.

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Upd. 07:52 AM2 languages · 2 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
2 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Guterres Begs Haiti’s Forgiveness as Sudan’s Silent Emergency Deepens

The UN chief offered a rare apology to Haitians for international neglect, while new data showed 21 million Sudanese face acute food insecurity, underscoring a widening gap between global attention and humanitarian need.

In a sweltering former school in Port-au-Prince now crammed with more than 1,250 displaced people, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday did something leaders of his stature rarely do: he asked for forgiveness. “I am sorry,” he told a mother of four who had described nearly two years of living without privacy or safety, her words a distillation of the terror unleashed by Haiti’s gangs. The apology, delivered during a one-day visit, was a stark acknowledgment that the world has failed the Caribbean nation, where surging violence has rendered one in ten Haitians homeless — some 1.5 million people — and claimed at least 2,300 lives this year alone, according to newly released UN figures. Among the recent victims is James Boyard, cabinet director of the defence ministry, kidnapped from one of the capital’s few remaining relatively secure neighbourhoods.

Yet Guterres’s visit was not solely an exercise in contrition. Viewed from Port-au-Prince, it also served as a show of support for an international security mission that is finally taking shape. The Secretary-General inspected elements of a UN-approved Gang Suppression Force, expected to begin operations within weeks, which many Haitians hope will break the armed groups’ stranglehold on the city. But even as that force prepares to deploy, the scale of the challenge is daunting: gangs now control an estimated 80 per cent of the capital, and the national police remain outgunned and under-resourced.

If Haiti’s crisis is acute and visible, Sudan’s is vast and dangerously ignored. Humanitarian officials in Nairobi and Cairo are warning that the war between rival military factions has pushed 33.7 million people into dependence on aid — the highest such figure globally — while more than 14 million have been driven from their homes. In Darfur and Kordofan, the overlap of conflict, displacement and hunger has created what aid workers describe as a “catastrophic” convergence. The Norwegian Refugee Council’s Matilde Fou told Al Ittihad that 21 million Sudanese now face acute food insecurity, with famine conditions already confirmed in some areas. Yet funding for the response is collapsing, forcing impossible choices about who receives help.

From the vantage point of New York and European capitals, the contrast is instructive. Haiti, despite its chronic dysfunction, commands intermittent attention because of its proximity to the United States and the risk of mass migration. Sudan, by contrast, is a crisis that rarely penetrates the global news cycle, even as its humanitarian indicators dwarf those of many higher-profile emergencies. Diplomats note that the UN’s appeal for Sudan is barely a quarter funded, while Haiti’s security mission — backed by Washington and Nairobi — has secured enough pledges to begin deploying. The asymmetry reflects not objective need but geopolitical convenience.

Guterres’s apology in Port-au-Prince may have been directed at Haitians, but it resonates across a fractured international system. With the Gang Suppression Force poised to enter the field, Haiti has at least a fragile pathway toward stability. Sudan, however, has no such prospect. Without a dramatic injection of funding and diplomatic energy, analysts in London and Addis Ababa warn, the country is drifting toward a famine that could eclipse any humanitarian disaster in a generation. The Secretary-General’s words of regret, however heartfelt, will mean little if they are not followed by a reordering of priorities that treats lives in Khartoum and Darfur with the same urgency as those in Port-au-Prince.

Source divergence

Geopolitics & Politics · 2 outlets · 2 languages

38%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral25%
Critical75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa del Golfo araboStampa latinoamericana
Stampa del Golfo arabo
allarmeurgenza

As global attention lies elsewhere, Sudan sinks into a silent humanitarian catastrophe: 21 million people face acute food insecurity, 33.7 million require aid, and 14 million have been displaced. The international community remains largely inert as the crisis deepens daily.

Stampa latinoamericana
indignazioneurgenza

Visiting Haiti, the UN Secretary-General begged forgiveness from women displaced by gang violence, acknowledging the international community's neglect. The UN warns that Haiti is experiencing the most severe crisis in the Western Hemisphere, with 6.4 million people in need of aid and 1.5 million displaced.

This story appeared in

2 outlets · 2 languages

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