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#1135: Haiti's poorest cross border, face backlash (fwd)
From:nozier@tradewind.net
Haiti's poorest cross border, face backlash
By David Abel, Globe Correspondent, 11/28/99 __BOSTON GLOBE
This story ran on page A22 of the Boston Globe on 11/28/99.
LA VEGA, Dominican Republic - An orphan without any education and with
little to eat, 12-year-old Lucksene Mezililen followed some friends
across the Haitian border some months ago and now scrapes by in this
central Dominican city illegally selling candy. Josephine Losette, 26,
recently gave birth to a dimple-faced boy at a maternity hospital in
Santo Domingo. Without papers, she worries whether her son will be
allowed to go to school in her adopted country.Taking a break from
moving earth and pulverizing cement, Aldonis Celesten, 40, supports
eight children home in Haiti on the $8 he earns each day under the
table helping to build a highway overpass in Santo Domingo. At least
half a million Haitians live illegally in the Dominican Republic. And
like Mezililen, Losette, and Celesten, few of them speak Spanish, most
live in dire poverty, few have Dominican friends, and many are harassed
and arbitrarily deported by Dominican police, who regard them as an
unwanted underclass. ''They treat us like we are strangers, like we are
animals, that we shouldn't be trusted,'' Mezililen said after putting
down a bin of the sugary Mani candy he had balanced on his head. ''It's
not easy to live here. But there is nothing in Haiti.''The poor
treatment of Haitians living across the frontier in the eastern
two-thirds of Hispaniola - the lush Caribbean island that some 8
million Creole-speaking Haitians share with about 8 million
Spanish-speaking Dominicans - has long been a subject of controversy.
But the issue began dominating the airwaves and newspapers in both
countries after a report in October by the Organization of American
States accused the Dominican government of carrying out mass
deportations, and recommended that it grant Haitians legal rights.
The report rebuked Dominican officials for not adopting measures such as
issuing undocumented Haitian workers residency cards or legalizing the
status of their children born in the Dominican Republic. Despite a
provision in the Dominican constitution granting citizenship to anyone
born on Dominican territory, as many as 280,000 undocumented Haitian
children live without even identity cards, according to Haiti's
embassy in Santo Domingo. ''This is a huge injustice. Some of these
children only speak Spanish, but they have no documents and they can't
even go to school,'' said Joseph Daseme, who oversees immigration
matters at the Haitian Embassy. ''This is a problem of discrimination;
if we were white this wouldn't be happening.'' Officials from the three
major parties, however, unite in their dismissal of the OAS report.
Different governments here have long relied on another provision in the
Dominican constitution that denies citizenship to those children born of
parents ''in transit'' through the Dominican Republic. The undocumented
Haitians - even those who have lived here for decades - have long been
considered in transit. As for the deportations, which often occur so
quickly the Haitians have little or no warning to collect their
possessions, immigration officials say they're part of the routine
repatriation of 30,000 undocumented Haitians each year. ''They are
here illegally and it is our right to deport them,'' said Ivan Pena,
director of Haitian migration at the Dominican Immigration Department.
''We are not violating their human rights. The constitution says they
are in transit. They aren't Dominicans.'' Prejudice, mistrust,
and tension between Haitians and Dominicans go back
to 1822, not long after Haiti became the world's first black republic.
In a bid to topple slavery in the Spanish colony to the east, Haiti
invaded the Dominican Republic, ruling harshly until Dominicans gained
independence in 1844. Ever since, many Dominican officials have fanned
the flames of racism by warning that Haiti has designs to take over
the whole island. The worst conflict between the two countries, however,
came in 1937 when the Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo ordered about
30,000 migrant Haitians slaughtered along the Massacre River near the
border. Dominican officials have often attributed problems such as high
unemployment and depressed wages to the glut of undocumented Haitians,
many of whom have been welcomed across the border to work in low-paying
jobs harvesting sugar cane or building roads. Those complaints have
increased in recent years, as the Dominican Republic boasts one of the
highest growth rates in the Western Hemisphere, about 7 percent, while
Haiti remains the region's poorest country. Despite the tensions, the
past few years have seen unprecedented improvements in relations. For
the first time in six decades, the Dominican and Haitian presidents
last year reciprocated visits. That followed steps the two governments
took in 1996 to strengthen diplomatic, legal, and commercial ties,
paving the way last year for the countries to begin direct mail service
and to stop routing their letters through Miami.
This story ran on page A22 of the Boston Globe on
11/28/99.