France has evacuated some 240 people from violence-wracked Haiti on French army helicopters, its foreign ministry said Wednesday.
"More than 170 French nationals and around 70 people of European and other nationalities in a vulnerable situation" were airlifted out, it said in a statement.
They have all been taken to a "navy boat that will ferry them today to Fort-de-France" in the French overseas territory of Martinique, it said.
Some 1,100 French citizens live in Haiti, many of them holding dual nationality, according to the foreign ministry.
Paris first announced the flights on Sunday, saying people wanting to leave should contact the embassy in Port-au-Prince.
Port-au-Prince has been rocked by street battles that erupted in late February, prompting the resignation earlier this month of Prime Minister Ariel Henry. His departure, a key demand by an alliance of armed gangs that now control most of the capital, has not lessened the violence.
Haitians are suffering serious food shortages during the wait for a transitional government to be formed.