Armed men attempted to hijack a UN food convoy at a road near Haiti's Jeremie airport, the UN said Tuesday, assessing that the situation in the quake-hit country is "stable but potentially volatile."
"An incident was reported at the the Jeremie airport of an armed group attacking a food convoy; warning shots were fired," said the UN Bureau for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in a report on the situation in Haiti.
"The overall security situation across the country remains stable but potentially volatile," it said.
Elisabeth Byrs, spokeswoman of OCHA in Geneva, told AFP that the armed group had made a road blockade, but the UN mission had "fired a few warning shots, sending them fleeing" in the incident on Saturday.
Meanwhile, in the city of Jacmel, to the south of the capital Port-au-Prince, 33 prisoners who had escaped from a prison during the earthquake which struck on January 12, were caught Sunday, added OCHA.
Some 6,000 detainees have fled Haitian prisons as they were partially destroyed and left without surveillance since the devastating earthquake on January 12 which left 170,000 people dead.
The security situation is one of the main concerns of international relief teams and residents of the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince, which had been hit by looting following the disaster.
Aid convoys are usually escorted and distributions monitored by UN mission escorts, which are in some occasions also assisted by the United States, which had deployed 22,000 soldiers to Haiti.
Share This Article With Planet Earth