Deportations to Haiti Despite Gang Control and Humanitarian Collapse
The US deported Haitians to a country the FAA banned US airlines from landing in due to gang gunfire, where 90% of the capital is under gang control and 1.4 million are displaced. DHS terminated TPS for 348,000 Haitians while the State Department maintained a Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory.
The Trump administration deported Haitian nationals to a country where 90% of Port-au-Prince is under gang control, 1.4 million people are internally displaced, and the US State Department maintains a Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory. The FAA banned US airlines from landing at Port-au-Prince airport after deportation planes came under gunfire. DHS simultaneously terminated both Haiti's TPS (348,000 people) and CHNV parole, while shortening the TPS extension timeline.
Executive summary
What this record documents
- 90% of Port-au-Prince is under gang control as of July 2025 according to the United Nations.
- The FAA banned US airlines from landing at Port-au-Prince airport after deportation planes came under gang gunfire; flights were rerouted to Cap-Haitien.
- 1.4 million people were internally displaced in Haiti by October 2025, a 36% increase from end of 2024.
- The US State Department maintains a Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory for Haiti.
- DHS terminated TPS for approximately 348,000 Haitians and ended CHNV parole affecting tens of thousands more.
Timeline
Sequence of events
February 5, 2025
First deportation flight to Haiti under Trump
A deportation flight arrived in Haiti with the first group of Haitian deportees under Trump's executive orders.
March 19, 2025
Deportation flight to Cap-Haitien
A deportation flight landed in Cap-Haitien with 46 passengers after the FAA banned flights to Port-au-Prince.
March 25, 2025
CHNV parole terminated
DHS terminated the CHNV parole program, stripping legal status from tens of thousands of Haitian parolees.
June 27, 2025
Haiti TPS terminated
DHS announced the termination of TPS for Haiti, affecting approximately 348,000 people, despite the Level 4 travel advisory.
September 1, 2025
Largest deportation flight: 132 Haitians
The largest single deportation flight to Haiti carried 132 people, bringing the total to 295 deported since inauguration.
February 2, 2026
Federal judge blocks Haiti TPS termination
A federal judge in Washington, D.C. indefinitely paused the termination of TPS for Haiti, finding DHS's decision 'arbitrary and capricious' and in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
The Trump administration deported Haitian nationals to a country in the grip of a catastrophic humanitarian crisis -- one so severe that the FAA banned US commercial airlines from landing at Port-au-Prince airport after deportation planes came under gang gunfire. The United Nations estimated that over 90% of Port-au-Prince is under gang control, 1.4 million people are internally displaced, and there is no functioning government. The US State Department maintains a Level 4 "Do Not Travel" advisory for the entire country.
Despite these conditions -- which the US government's own agencies have documented and acknowledged -- DHS terminated both TPS protections for approximately 348,000 Haitians and CHNV humanitarian parole for tens of thousands more, while simultaneously conducting deportation flights.
The Safety Contradiction
The most damning feature of Haiti deportations is the direct contradiction between DHS's stated rationale and the assessments of every other government agency:
- DHS claims: The "environmental situation in Haiti has improved enough that it is safe for Haitian citizens to return home."
- State Department: Level 4 "Do Not Travel" advisory -- the highest danger level
- FAA: Banned US airlines from Port-au-Prince after planes came under gunfire
- UN: 90% of Port-au-Prince under gang control; 1.4 million displaced
- IRAP: Calls deportation flights "a violation of international and humanitarian principles"
DHS attempted to frame Haiti's deteriorating security as a reason to terminate TPS rather than extend it, arguing that gang control created "an untenable screening and vetting environment." This reasoning -- that the worse conditions get, the less protection people deserve -- inverts the entire purpose of TPS.
Deportation Flights
Since Trump took office, at least four deportation flights have carried 295 Haitians back to the country, with the largest single flight carrying 132 deportees in September 2025. After the FAA's ban on Port-au-Prince landings, deportation flights were rerouted to Cap-Haitien in the north -- still in a country where no area is considered safe by the State Department.
Deportees arrive in a country with no functioning government, no access to jobs or healthcare, and active gang warfare. The USCRI president stated plainly: "It is not safe to land a plane in Haiti, and it is not safe to deport Haitians."
Court Intervention
On February 2, 2026, a federal judge in Washington, D.C. indefinitely paused the termination of TPS for Haiti, finding that DHS's decision was "arbitrary and capricious" and violated the Administrative Procedure Act by failing to fully consider the dangerous conditions in the country.
Why This Entry Is Rated Critical
- FAA itself banned landings: The US aviation authority determined it is too dangerous for American planes to land where the US government deports people
- 90% gang control of capital: No functioning government or safety infrastructure for deportees
- 1.4 million displaced: The country cannot absorb its own population, let alone deportees
- Level 4 Do Not Travel: The State Department tells Americans not to go where DHS sends Haitians
- Judicial finding of arbitrary action: A federal judge ruled the TPS termination violated federal law
- Scale: 348,000+ TPS holders and tens of thousands of parolees face removal to these conditions
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
A Violation of International and Humanitarian Principles: The United States Must Cease Deportation Flights to Haiti
U.S. Terminates Protections for Haitians Despite Deteriorating Conditions
It is not safe to land a plane in Haiti and it is not safe to deport Haitians
Deportation flight from U.S. arrives in Haiti with 46 passengers
Termination of the Designation of Haiti for Temporary Protected Status
Trump administration ends CHNV program, putting tens of thousands of Haitians at risk for deportations
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