In this Regional Overview covering April 2025
- Colombia: Violence escalates as the Gulf Clan launches a wave of attacks against security forces
- Ecuador: Re-election victory for Noboa amid rising violence and security challenges
- Haiti: Gangs’ offensive and the related security response drive an uptick of violence in the Centre department
- Jamaica: Police intensify anti-gang actions amid concerns over police abuses
- Mexico: Security forces’ operations prompt cartel retaliations in Michoacán and Baja California Sur
- Panama: Reform to the Social Security Fund sparks an increase in protests
Colombia: Violence escalates as the Gulf Clan launches a wave of attacks against security forces
On 5 April, security forces killed José Miguel Demoya Hernández, known as “Chirimoya,” a high-ranking member of the Gulf Clan, in a military operation in La Apartada, Córdoba.1 In retaliation for the killing, the Gulf Clan launched a wave of targeted attacks against police and military stations and personnel, a tactic known as “Pistol Plan.”2 In April, ACLED records 36 clashes between the Gulf Clan and security forces and 11 attacks against off-duty soldiers and police officers, leading to the death of at least 35 people and primarily affecting the Antioquia and Córdoba departments. The month thus became the deadliest for violence involving the Gulf Clan and state forces since ACLED’s coverage of Colombia began in 2018. It was even deadlier than July 2022, when the group launched a similar offensive for the extradition of its then-maximum leader, Dayro Antonio Úsuga David, known as “Otoniel.”
Colombian authorities doubled down on security operations against the Gulf Clan. As of 5 May, they claimed to have arrested 123 of its members, many tied to the “Pistol Plan.”3 The escalation of violence between the Gulf Clan and security forces may bury for good the already stalled negotiation process the government had announced with the group, marking another setback in President Gustavo Petro’s Total Peace plans.
Ecuador: Re-election victory for Noboa amid rising violence and security challenges
President Daniel Noboa won re-election in the 13 April runoff, securing around 56% of the votes. Noboa, who has been in power since November 2023, has focused his presidency on a crackdown against the rising threat of organized crime, through declaring an internal armed conflict and tasking the military to expand its role in public security. His left-wing opponent, Luisa González, has rejected the result and called for a recount, claiming fraud.4 European Union election observers, however, have found no evidence of widespread vote irregularities.5
No major incidents occurred on election day, and, overall, the 2025 electoral process was not marked by high-impact events of political violence, unlike the 2023 snap elections. However, ACLED records over 140 events of violence targeting political figures between the start of the electoral process in February 2024 and the April runoff between Noboa and González. This is the highest number of events of any electoral process since 2018, with significant increases in Manabí and El Oro provinces. Worsening violence against political figures seems to mirror an overall deterioration of security in the country, with the first quarter of 2025 recording the highest number of homicides in the country’s recent history, according to authorities.6
Tackling criminal violence, including that targeting political figures, will probably remain President Noboa’s main challenge. Although Noboa’s militarization strategy may have contributed to an initial reduction of violence in 2024,7 it is unlikely to be sustainable over time, and he will now have to develop a comprehensive, long-term plan to tackle the country’s growing insecurity.8
Haiti: Gangs’ offensive and the related security response drive an uptick of violence in the Centre department
Violence intensified in the Centre department after Viv Ansanm-affiliated gangs 400 Mawozo and Canaan launched an offensive on 31 March in Mirebalais and Saut-d’Eau, in an effort to consolidate control over the border with the Dominican Republic. Gangs attacked civilians and key infrastructure, including the prosecutor’s office, a local radio station, and two police stations, forcing around 6,000 people to flee the area.9 The move also highlights the ability of Port-au-Prince-based gangs to launch attacks beyond the capital, raising concerns that they could target key assets such as the hydroelectric Péligre Dam, which is located 15 kilometers away from Mirebalais and generates electricity for much of the country.10 The incursion triggered intense clashes with police and self-defense groups, leaving over 70 fatalities, mostly among gang members, in April. This marks the deadliest year on record in the Centre department since ACLED started recording violent events in Haiti in 2018.
Clashes between gangs and security forces also continued in the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area, where police and military forces, supported by self-defense groups, claimed to have killed at least 70 gang members in attacks on Viv Ansanm positions in Kenscoff, Port-au-Prince, and Gressier communes. Acknowledging the growing threat that gangs represent for Haiti’s stability, the United States announced the designation of the Viv Ansanm and the Gran Grif gangs as terrorist organizations on 2 May.11 The designation seeks to hamstring financial and weapons supplies underpinning gang activities, and thus support the security response. However, the gangs’ control over the Haitian economy means that all financial transactions to Haiti could be at risk, compounding the country’s economic and humanitarian crises.12
Jamaica: Police intensify anti-gang actions amid concerns over police abuses
Police forces clashed at least 15 times with armed groups in April, doubling the events of the previous month. Most occurred in the Greater Kingston area in Saint Andrew and Kingston parishes. These clashes led to the reported deaths of at least 18 people. Among those killed were at least three gang leaders, including Shacqol Pounal, leader of the 7’s gang, who was killed on 16 April. The day after Pounal was killed, another gang member was shot dead by security officers amid an alert issued by the Jamaica Constabulary Force regarding threats of retaliatory actions by the 7’s gang.13
According to Minister of National Security Horace Chang, security forces have intensified their efforts to fight gangs in 2025 through operations and investigations that have impacted 63 criminal groups. This has contributed to reducing homicides in the first quarter of the year to the lowest levels in over two decades.14 In the first four months of 2025, ACLED records a 48% decrease in violence targeting civilians at the hands of armed groups in Jamaica, compared to the same period in 2024. At the same time, the number of clashes involving security forces and their deadliness are the highest since 2018. This is prompting public backlash: On 29 April, the social movement Jamaicans for Justice marched in Kingston to denounce the rise in police abuses and demand greater accountability.15
Mexico: Security forces’ operations prompt cartel retaliations in Michoacán and Baja California Sur
On 23 April, suspected members of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) clashed with military forces in four municipalities of Michoacán state. They also set vehicles on fire to block roads in 24 municipalities in Michoacán and in four other municipalities in Jalisco and Guanajuato. CJNG-led violence in April echoes a similar show of force in March in response to security operations that are suspected to be aimed at arresting a high-ranking member of the organization.16 However, Secretary of Security Omar García Harfuch claimed that the escalation of violence is driven by disputes between criminal groups.17 The security operation that seemed to prompt CJNG’s violent retaliation was part of intensified state operations and clashes with organized crime groups in Michoacán that resulted in the deaths of at least 30 armed men and security forces’ personnel in April, making it one of the deadliest months for clashes between state forces and non-state armed groups since 2018.
The CJNG was not the only organized crime group to step up retaliations against security forces in April. In Baja California Sur, security forces defused an attempt by the Sinaloa Cartel’s Los Mayos faction to make inroads in the state, which is currently under the Los Chapitos faction’s influence.18 This sparked a series of criminal group-led retaliatory attacks against security forces. Notably, on 22 April, in two separate attacks, suspected members of Los Mayos killed an officer of the State Agency of Investigations in La Paz and a military officer in Mulegé, while both of them were off duty.19 Following the attacks, security forces arrested seven Los Mayos members.
Panama: Reform to the Social Security Fund sparks an increase in protests
On 18 March, President José Raúl Molino ratified a reform to the Social Security Fund that was approved days before by the parliament. It incrementally increases the employer’s contributions in the coming years and mandates that independent workers make contributions to the fund, among other provisions.20 The reform sparked significant opposition, particularly from labor unions and education professionals, who argue it reduces employees’ pensions, eliminates solidarity mechanisms, and opens the door to the privatization of the system.21 Protests occurred throughout the legislative debate and following the reform’s approval in March, but significantly increased in April. ACLED records 70 demonstrations in April, two-thirds more than in March, making it one of the highest monthly levels since ACLED started covering the country in 2018.
Adding to the tensions, the government also signed a security agreement with the United States on 10 April, allowing the presence of US troops in the territory.22 The vast majority of the protests recorded in April were against the reform and this agreement, which protesters claim violates the country’s sovereignty. The protests took place in 10 of the country’s 15 provinces and Indigenous districts. Although most demonstrations were peaceful, many turned violent toward the end of April, as police started intervening with tear gas and by arresting demonstrators.23 As tensions mount with the government seemingly unwilling to concede, Panama could experience another wave of protests.