The Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression publishes a special report on the situation of press freedom in Haiti

May 9, 2025

Washington, DC—The Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression (SRFOE) of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) publishes its special report on the situation of press freedom in Haiti, a State that, according to its assessment, faces the most serious and persistent challenges to the exercise of journalism in the hemisphere.

The report examines the evolution of the guarantees and conditions affecting the practice of journalism, highlights its fundamental role in overcoming the country’s multidimensional crisis—including the holding of elections before February 7, 2026—and formulates recommendations to the authorities to protect and strengthen press freedom. The set of facts documented between 2018 and 2025 by this Office paints an extremely alarming picture for media professionals in Haiti: deliberate killings; armed attacks against media outlets; enforced disappearances and kidnappings; internal displacement and forced exile; as well as attacks against those covering demonstrations and social protests. The convergence of these patterns of violence against the press, exacerbated by persistently high levels of impunity, leads the Special Rapporteurship to conclude that the country, and especially areas where the State has lost its monopoly on force, is becoming a silenced zone without precedent in the Americas.

The report also posits journalism as an essential tool for confronting and ultimately overcoming the multidimensional crisis affecting Haiti, given its critical role in exposing human rights violations and high levels of impunity; ensuring accountability of both national and international authorities; fostering informed public debate; and safeguarding free, fair, and transparent elections necessary to restore democratic order and the full functioning of the State. In this context, the document is particularly addressed to the new institutional and security actors in the country—such as the Presidential Transition Council (CPT) and the UN Multinational Security Support Mission (MSSM)—urging them, with the support of the international community, to establish conditions that enable the free and safe practice of journalism.

The report is structured into four sections. The first examines the state of democratic institutions in Haiti, including an overview of the two cycles of destabilization identified by the IACHR in its August 2022 report on the “Human Rights Situation in Haiti,” as well as the conclusion of Ariel Henry’s interim government (2021–2024) and the installation of the Presidential Transitional Council (CPT) in early 2024. The second section analyzes the request, authorization, mandate, deployment, and initial outcomes of the MSSM. The third section assesses the state of press freedom in the country in light of applicable Inter-American standards, consolidating the Rapporteurship’s monitoring from 2018 through May 2025. Finally, the fourth section presents recommendations directed to the State—led by the interim government—as well as to national and international security forces, including the MSSM and any potential future mission or mechanism that may succeed it.

This Office trusts that this report will contribute to documenting the various violations of press freedom and related rights committed over the past seven years, by recording the crimes committed, identifying the victims, and assessing the current status of investigations. It also hopes that the report will underscore the strategic value of journalism in the current context and its essential role in understanding and seeking solutions to the multidimensional crisis, encouraging national and international actors to adopt firm, coordinated, and timely measures.

To access the full report, please click here.

The Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression is an office created by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to promote the defense of the right to freedom of thought and expression in the Americas, considering its fundamental role in the consolidation and development of the democratic system.

No. R096/25

2:44 PM