
IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES Image caption, The security situation has deteriorated amid the country’s political instability
Wilguens Louissaint and Amady John Wesley had traveled to an area where rival gangs are fighting for control.
Mr. Wesley’s employer, Écoute FM, said he was “savagely” killed while reporting on the area.
The radio station told the BBC that one of the gangs was behind the deaths.
It added the unnamed group was a rival of the Baz Ti Makak gang, which had been trying to speak with the media.
A security source confirmed to CNN the men had been burned alive, while another unnamed source told Reuters news agency a third journalist managed to escape.
On Saturday, gunmen tried to kill Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry. He had vowed to crack down on the gangs who have been blamed for a wave of kidnappings across the country.
However, police have been largely ineffective. They have failed to organise any large-scale operations to tackle gang violence in the country since March 2021, when four police officers were killed in an attempted raid in a Port-au-Prince neighbourhood.
Thursday’s attack took place in Laboule 12, just to the south of the capital. Gangs here are fighting for control because of the road which passes through it, which connects Port-au-Prince to the country’s south.
The main road to the south from Port-au-Prince is already under the control of one of Haiti’s most powerful gangs.
It is not immediately exactly which gang targeted the journalists, or exactly why they were targeted. Écoute FM denounced the attack on “journalists exercising their profession freely” in Haiti. Reporters Without Borders describes it as a “dangerous and precarious” place to work, noting a number of journalists have been killed in recent years.