Haiti – Dominican Republic- thousands in the Dominican Republic are now stateless + Video

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Hundreds of thousands in the Dominican Republic are now stateless

opinionPublished on June 20, 2015 – By Amalia Perez – Research Associate at the Council on Hemispheric Affairs – Commentary:

Beginning this week, the Dominican Republic government will move forward with the deportation of an estimated 210,000 allegedly Haitian refugees living in the Dominican Republic (DR). A large majority of them have lived in the Dominican Republic for generations, have never visited Haiti or spoken Creole, or were brought over from Haiti as children.

The  y will be rendered stateless under the DR’s draconian immigration laws, which targets and expels those “dark-skinned Dominicans with Haitian facial features” who cannot prove, with birth certificates or citizenship papers, they legally belong in the DR. 

The Dominican government has been creating a stateless underclass out of those of Haitian descent for decades; however, the decision to deport them in massive premeditated quantities — despite fervent opposition by foreign governments and international legal and humanitarian bodies — is a decisive escalation from structural violence to physical violence at the hands of President Danilo Medina’s government.

The prevalence of antihaitanismo, a pejorative ideology which “serves elite interests well and has even been accepted by the great majority of the Dominican people as part of their political culture”, has its roots in the era of Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo, whose regime infamously warned against “Haitianizing influences, whose consequences will always be extremely fatal for Dominican society.”

This ideology pulsed throughout the Parsley Massacre of 1937, in which the Trujillo regime murdered upwards of 20,000 alleged Haitians on the basis of whether or not they could trill the “r” in perejil, the Spanish term for parsley — a perverse semantic exercise that often proved morbid for native Haitian Creole speakers.

The overt xenophobia of the past has devolved into the immigration policy of the present: in 2010, the Dominican government altered the constitution to revoke the citizenship of children born to “transient” parents, implying that everyone of Haitian descent is ephemeral and thus dispensable from the perspective of Dominican authorities.

In 2013, a decision by the Constitutional Court ordered a review of birth certificates issued since 1929, to prosecute Dominican-born children and adults born “in transit” over the greater part of the last century. This controversial ruling elicited global uproar from the international humanitarian and legal sphere, which prompted the Dominican government to finally put into effect the “regularization” program that had faced systematic delays since its initial proposal in 2004.

It ostensibly allowed for Haitian-descendants and Haitian migrant workers to register themselves as citizens, either with proven identification from the Haitian government, a birth certificate, or proof of legal residency demonstrating their continued presence in the DR since before October 2011.

Over 500,000 people qualify for residency under the program; however, of the 250,000 who have rushed to the capital, Santo Domingo, or any other center in which they can register themselves, only a fraction have been granted a hearing to reevaluate their citizenship.

This is, in part, due to the popular practice amongst hospitals and municipal centers to deny birth certificates to children born to those who don’t have proof of Dominican citizenship themselves. Moreover, scores of Haitian descending Dominicans, Haitian-Dominicans and Haitians living in the DR give birth in rural, home-style centers, where they don’t have access to birth certificates at all. Nevertheless, lines of people stretched down city streets, hoping to make the registration deadline, which was last night, Wednesday, June 17, at midnight.

Such is tantamount to the expiration date on the citizenship of hundreds of thousands of workers, families and children, all of whom awoke this morning stateless, denationalized and promised deportation by a government intent on their expulsion on the basis of their race and nationality.

Given that Haiti’s per capita income of US$250 per month afflicts the 80 percent of its population estimated to be living below the poverty line — dismal in comparison to the DR’s 35 percent — along with the DR’s tourism and construction driven economy, Haitians will continue to seek refuge in the DR. This demand for cheap labor prompts Haitian migrant workers to be welcomed, albeit subliminally, by a population with an “open secret”, bravely summed up by the highly regarded Dominican economist and former ambassador, Bernardo Vega: “we don’t want Haitians, but we need them.”

Because of this, along with abolishing the DR’s denationalizing immigration laws, the DR and Haiti need to establish a pragmatic political and economic contract in order to protect Haitians in the DR from laws that deny their membership in unions, their ability to serve in meaningful jobs, their citizenship and their humanity.

The Council on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975, is an independent, non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and information organization. It has been described on the Senate floor as being “one of the nation’s most respected bodies of scholars and policy makers.” For more information, visit www.coha.org or email coha@coha.org

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Black In Latin America – Haiti and The Dominican Republic- The Roots of Division

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Comments

  • de castro  On 06/21/2015 at 5:12 am

    Shameful disgraceful…..will not visit DR again unless they recind that decision.
    Neither will my family or friends. Que sera

  • de castro  On 06/22/2015 at 5:00 am

    DR neighbour from “hell”…none of my friends or family will be visiting/returning to Dominican Republic soon. Lets hope the people of DR who I enjoyed many
    visits with vote these political idiots out next elections.
    Superiority complexities of the political class.
    Enjoyed the view points of the article above….truthfully honest.
    Did not Germans import cheap labour to work in their car factories.
    Until thatcher invited the Japanese to open factories in highly unemployed north UK……now German and Japanese cars are manufactured nearer the demand market.
    Border controls are a necessary evil we must live with but eventually the euro concept of free movement of goods services and people will prevail.
    Today I can drive to 17+ euroland states without showing a passport (flag of convenience)……UK opted out not signatory to SHENGEN but will soon have to decide in referendum on full membership of EU …..IN or OUT.
    SCOTS decided to remain in UK
    UK will decide to remain in EU but not adopt the EURO as legal tender.
    Pound will remain strongest free floating currency of the developed world.
    However not forever in this changing world.

    DR HAITI issue may also be “racially” as well as politicallyeconomically motivated. Shameful disgraceful.
    Any Haitian who has lived/worked in DR for a few years with a clean criminal
    record is being punished unfairly.
    PETER pay for PAUL dogma.
    Its 2015 not 1515.
    Vote them OUT.😈

  • guyaneseonline  On 06/22/2015 at 10:45 pm

    Are these the reasons why some Dominicans hate Haitians?

    http://www.wow509.com/are-these-the-reasons-why-some-dominicans-hate-haitians/

  • de castro  On 06/22/2015 at 11:57 pm

    Dominicans do not hate Haitians or visa versa.
    Neither do southern Irish hate northern Irish or visa versa.

    Religion economics and politics divide the “human race”
    Class another…..upper middle lower.

    Karl Marx thought he found the solution (he is buried in mussel hill London)
    where I visited his graveside recently.😈😇

    Each produce according to his means
    Receive according to his needs

    Ancient philosophy which has failed miserably in Russia and China.

    DR HAITI solution is simple
    Economic migrants once vetted/accepted as residents have equal rights also.
    Indentured labourers of the old world after “slavery” was abolished.
    Some argue that slavery continues today.
    As long as Haitians are not “taking away” Dominican jobs economic migrants are
    useful to the host state…who does the cane cutting and punting in DR sugar industry …..Haitians.

    Politicians will always “demonise” minorities to appease their supporters and win votes….arrogance of power…..Hitlers of our planet.

    Who divided Hispanola afterr C Columbus “discovered” it (accidentally) ?
    Why does half speak French other Spanish……were not european battles/wars
    of attrition played out in carribean…the indigenous population removed/perished by europpean diseases etc etc come on DR do not let the political class destroy/distort history. …good neighbours should learn to live togeather peacefully…..who wants neighbours “neighbours from hell”?

    Viv la vida

  • guyaneseonline  On 06/23/2015 at 2:29 am

    Haiti’s oil reserves now worth $120 billion dollars

    They say “Haiti is the poorest nation in the western hemisphere.” Is that true? No. That is a boatload of bs. Here is why. Haitians are poor, but the land of Haiti is rich with natural resources. Folks, here is the truth Haiti’s oil reserves now worth $120 billion US dollars. That means our country Haiti is among the one percent wealthiest nations on earth. That is a fact!

    Let me assure you that no one has ever seen this before. But I have to confess, when I first heard about oil in Haiti I was quite skeptical. After all, why haven’t we heard about this before? Why Haitians are so poor? All are good questions. Let’s get to the truth.
    [read more]
    http://www.wow509.com/haitis-oil-reserves/

  • de castro  On 06/23/2015 at 11:58 pm

    Surely if this is so….it follows that Jamaica Cuba even Florida is part of this oil
    reserve shared with T+T Venezuela et al….
    Why isn’t Cuba and Venezuela producing oil in joint effort/ventures. ?
    They are so “politically” “ideologically” umbically joined…with their pro Russian
    beliefs….come on pull other leg !
    The only coclusion I can imagine/draw is the “greed” MADuro demonstrates by wishing to “stop” Guyana developing their oil offshore.

    Politics has everything to do with “economics”….political decisions/indecisions
    can destroy nation states “zimbawbee” et al.

    Get it right and you prosper get it wrong and you suffer/stagnate.
    Nothing will come of this “oil discovery” … and if it does eventually
    observe how oil wealth is “destroying” T+T Venezuela even Russia……
    Market Forces !😈😇

    My heart bleeds for the poor Haitians unfortunate discovery..and the corrupt
    future “black gold” will bring to their rescue/sufferings after the earthquake
    disaster……could it be the extraction of oil off Venezuela that resulted in the earthquake….?…am no geogolist/scientist but am sure its possibility.

    Que sera

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