Chattanooga Times Free Press

U.S.-expelled Haitians fuel fights to Latin America

- BY JULIE WATSON, GISELA PEREZ DE ACHA, KATIE LICARI, TRENTON DANIEL AND PATRICIA LUNA

SANTIAGO, Chile — With jokes, upbeat Caribbean music and vacation scenes of sun-kissed beaches and palm trees, Haitian influencer­s on YouTube and TikTok advertise charter flights to South America.

But they are not targeting tourists.

Instead, they are touts for a thriving, little-known shadow industry that is profiting from the U.S. government sending people back to Haiti, a country besieged by gang violence.

More than a dozen South American travel agencies have rented planes from low-budget Latin American airlines — some of them as large as 238-seat Airbuses — and then sold tickets at premium prices. Many of the customers are Haitians who had been living in Chile and Brazil before they made their way to the Texas border in September, only to be expelled by the Biden administra­tion and prevented from seeking asylum. They are using the charter flights to flee Haiti again and return to South America.

Rodolfo Noriega of the National Coordinato­r of Immigrants in Chile said Haitians are being exploited by businesses taking advantage of their desperatio­n. They “are at the end of a chain of powerful businesses making money from this circuit of Haitian migration,” he said.

The thriving business model was revealed in an eight-month investigat­ion by the Associated Press in partnershi­p with the University of California, Berkeley’s Human Rights Center and its Investigat­ive Reporting Program.

Haitians sick of the deprivatio­ns of their island home resettled in Chile or Brazil, many after Haiti’s catastroph­ic 2010 earthquake. Then, last fall, struggling as the pandemic hit local economies and beset by racism, thousands decided to make their way to the Texas border town of Del Rio. There, they ran afoul of a public health order, invoked by the Trump administra­tion and continued under the Biden administra­tion, that blocks migrants from requesting asylum.

Authoritie­s returned them not to South America, where some of their children were born, but to their original homeland — Haiti.

Some interviewe­d by the AP said they feared for their lives there and wanted to return to South America. But airlines had stopped direct commercial flights from Haiti to Chile and Brazil during the pandemic; their remaining option was the charters.

The flights from Haiti became a lucrative business as restrictio­ns aimed at controllin­g the spread of the coronaviru­s decimated tourism, according to the travel agents. Planes arrive empty to Haiti but return to South America full.

From November 2020 until this May, at least 128 charters were rented by travel agencies in Chile and Brazil for flights from Haiti, according to flight tracking informatio­n, online advertisem­ents matching the flights to agencies and other independen­t verificati­on by the AP and Berkeley.

Since taking office in January 2021, the Biden administra­tion has sent more than 25,000 Haitians back to Haiti despite warnings from human rights groups that the expulsions would only contribute to Haiti’s travails and feed more Haitian migration to Latin America and the U.S.

Some who took charter flights back to South America have headed north again on the network of undergroun­d routes that wind through Central America and Mexico and that ultimately lead to the United States, according to immigratio­n attorneys, advocates and interviews with dozens of Haitians.

Many of the Haitians go back to Chile and Brazil, rather than places close to the U.S. like Mexico, because they have visas and other legal paperwork to get into those countries. And having lived there, they can find jobs quickly to make money for the trip north.

Some, like Amstrong Jean-Baptiste, also have children who were born in South America. The 33-year-old father of two said he spent $6,000 on a harrowing trip from Chile to Texas, only to be sent back to Haiti.

He said he had knives pulled on him, forged rivers that carried others away to their deaths and encountere­d highway robbers. In the end, he said the Haitians were handcuffed and “treated like animals” by U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s. He said his son caught pneumonia in the immigratio­n detention center.

As he waited in Port-auPrince for a charter flight back to Santiago, news from northern Chile underscore­d why he wanted to go to the United States in the first place: A demonstrat­ion against immigrants drew thousands of protesters who turned violent and destroyed the belongings of migrants living in a camp.

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