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28777: (news) Chamberlain: Haitians-Discriminatory Treatment (fwd)





From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>

   By PAULINE ARRILLAGA

   MIAMI, July 29 (AP) -- The conference room at the law offices of
Kurzban, Kurzban, Weinger and Tetzeli was crammed tight. Attorneys took
turns at the microphone, their faces etched with frustration. The question
they kept coming back to: Why?
   Why, they asked, are Haitian immigrants singled out by the U.S.
government for unequal treatment?
   On this day, earlier in the year, the topic was temporary protected
status, a designation the federal government can grant to foreigners
allowing them to remain part time in the United States because of political
unrest or environmental disasters at home.
   Central Americans have repeatedly been granted protected status
following hurricanes and earthquakes in Nicaragua, Honduras and El
Salvador. Immigrants from Burundi, Liberia, Somalia and Sudan also enjoy
such protections.
   But Haitians have never obtained relief, despite decades of political
turmoil, kidnappings and killings, and tribulations from tropical storms.
   "Why aren't Haitians good enough for the same basic protections?"
demanded Steve Forester, of the group Haitian Women of Miami.
   The question has long haunted Haitians seeking refuge in the United
States. But underlying it is a more provocative issue, one that some say
reflects how ill-designed and blatantly discriminatory the U.S. immigration
system has become:
   Are Haitian immigrants treated differently simply because they are
black?
   Ernso Joseph, an orphaned Haitian boy, was among hundreds of migrants
who waded ashore after their sailboat grounded off Miami in 2002. Though
just 15 when he arrived, Joseph spent almost three years battling
Department of Homeland Security officials who insisted he was over 18 and
eligible for deportation. Even after a judge granted him asylum in 2003,
the government kept Joseph in detention while it appealed the decision.
   Last summer, after a juvenile court ruled that Joseph was a minor, an
immigration judge granted him permanent residency.
   "I feel like I went through a lot, but it was worth it," says Joseph,
who lives in Miami and is going to school to learn English. Still, he says:
"All the Haitians and all of the nationalities should get equal treatment
when they come here."
   At the news conference earlier this year, 6-year-old Stephann Jasmin sat
curled like a kitten in his mother Jeannette's lap. Jeannette Jasmin lives
under a deportation order, having escaped Haiti seven years ago after being
kidnapped and beaten by political foes. Denied asylum in the United States,
she and her American-born son face separation now.
   Renes Ledix was there, too. His daughter, 28-year-old Renette, remains
in detention after fleeing storm-ravaged Gonaives, Haiti, to join her
family in Florida last year. Her father, a U.S. resident, sought to bring
Renette here under provisions of a 1998 law allowing Haitians with legal
status in the United States to apply for admission of their minor children.
   However, Renette "aged out" -- turned 21 -- while the application was
being processed, making her ineligible for admission. Now asylum has been
refused, and officials won't release Renette during her appeals process.
   What accounts for the treatment of these Haitians?
   Some, like former Attorney General John Ashcroft, have said Haitian
restrictions are a matter of national security -- that migrants from
countries such as Pakistan have used Haiti as a staging point for entry
into the United States.
   Haiti is not on the list of nations the U.S. Border Patrol considers of
"special interest" because of alleged sponsorship or support of terrorism.
   But while Haitians are uniformly detained or turned back, at least 148
immigrants from Pakistan, Iran and other listed countries were arrested in
2004-05 -- and then released on their own recognizance, according U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services.
   Meanwhile, the Border Patrol apprehended 30,843 Brazilians at the
Mexican border in fiscal year 2005, an increase of 258 percent over the
previous year. And though Brazil's border region with Paraguay and
Argentina has been labeled a source of fundraising for radical Islamic
groups by U.S. officials, more than 20,000 of these immigrants were
released on their own recognizance.
   Consciously or unconsciously, says Alex Stepick, director of the
Immigration and Ethnicity Institute at Florida International University,
the American policies on Haitians are driven by racism.
   But such "specific, restrictive and repressive" policies, he says, also
derive from negative stereotypes of Haitians as poor, uneducated and
diseased because they hail from the Western Hemisphere's most impoverished
nation.
   "We have this perception of Haitians being basically pathetic. It's a
misperception, and it simplifies the reality of Haiti extraordinarily,"
says Stepick, whose book "Pride Against Prejudice" examines the backlash
against Haitians who emigrate to America. "Nevertheless, it's a perception
that does lie behind many of the actions of the U.S. government and general
public opinion."
   Immigration officials maintain race has nothing to do with their rules.
   Jan Ting, an assistant commissioner for refugees, asylum and parole at
the Immigration and Naturalization Service during the first Bush
Administration, acknowledges policies have singled out Haitians for
"undeniably harsher treatment." However, he holds that such measures are
warranted to deter dangerous, and sometimes deadly, surges by sea.
   "The government has a genuine fear of triggering a mass migration.
Because Haiti is so close to the United States and because there are so
many people in Haiti who would like to come to the United States, there is
a fear ... that if we treat people too nicely or too gently and give them
release from detention too quickly that will simply encourage lots of
people in Haiti to make the effort," Ting says.
   One such exodus occurred in 1980, when an estimated 25,000 Haitians
joined 125,000 Cuban exiles in the outflow known as the Mariel boatlift.
From 1991 to 1994, the U.S. Coast Guard intercepted another 69,000
Haitians.
   Since then, however, the numbers have plunged. From 2000 on, the Coast
Guard has discovered more Dominicans making the journey by sea than
Haitians: more than 14,000 compared with some 12,000. Interdictions of
Cubans aren't far behind, at more than 10,245.
   Some Haitian rights advocates argue that the government's
deterrance-for-safety's-sake argument also carries little weight in light
of its open-door policy toward Cubans, allowing most Cubans who reach U.S.
shores to apply for permanent residency one year later.
   "It doesn't make any sense," says Marleine Bastien, who heads Haitian
Women of Miami. "Does that mean that the Department of Homeland Security is
more concerned about Haitians' lives than Cubans' lives?
   "Is it a crime to want to flee for freedom, for safety?" she adds. "Why
is it a crime for Haitians?"
   Nowhere are these inequalities more glaring than in South Florida, where
even Haitians and Cubans arriving on the same beach at the same time in the
same manner are treated differently.
   In April, authorities detained 44 Haitians after they landed on a beach
north of Miami in a 45-foot cabin cruiser. Also aboard was a Cuban man. The
Haitians were processed for removal.
   The Cuban, said Border Patrol spokesman Steve McDonald, "by virtue of
the fact that he's Cuban and eligible to adjust his status under the Cuban
Adjustment Act will ... have the opportunity to request to stay."