San Antonio Express-News

Activists: Haitians mistreated, expelled in crackdown by Dominican Republic

- By Danica Coto

DAJABON, Dominican Republic — Bien-aime St. Clair frowned as the stream of older Haitian migrants pushed past him. Accused of living in the Dominican Republic illegally, they knew they had no choice but to go back across the border to Haiti.

But St. Clair, 18, hesitated. He shouted at an immigratio­n agent.

“Boss! Hey! I don’t know anyone there,” he yelled in Spanish, motioning toward Haiti as he stood on the frontier that the two countries share on the island of Hispaniola.

St. Clair was a child when his mother brought him to the Dominican Republic, and though his life has been hard — his mom died when he was young, his father disappeare­d, and he was left alone to raise his disabled brother — it’s the only life he has known.

And now, he was being forced to leave, like more than 31,000 people deported by the Dominican Republic to Haiti this year, more than 12,000 of them in just the past three months — a huge spike, observers say. As the rest of the world closes its doors to Haitian migrants, the country that shares an island with Haiti also is cracking down in a way that human rights activists say hasn’t

been seen in decades.

The increasing mistreatme­nt of the country’s Haitians, they say, coincided with the rise of Luis Abinader, who took office as president in August 2020.

They accuse the government of targeting vulnerable population­s, separating children from their parents and racial profiling — Haiti is overwhelmi­ngly Black, while the majority of Dominicans identify as mixed race. Dominican authoritie­s, they say, are not only seeking out Haitians who recently crossed illegally into the Dominican Republic but also those who have long lived there.

“We’ve never seen this,” said William Charpantie­r, national coordinato­r

for the nonprofit National Roundtable for Migration and Refugees. “The government is acting like we’re at war.”

They’ve arrested Haitians who crossed illegally into the Dominican Republic; Haitians whose Dominican work permits have expired; those born in the DR to Haitian parents but denied citizenshi­p; even, activists say, Black Dominicans born to Dominican parents whom authoritie­s mistake for Haitians.

Haitian officials and activists also say the government is violating laws and agreements by deporting pregnant women, separating children from parents and arresting people between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m.

Meanwhile, activists say hostility against Haitians is spiraling as Abinader unleashed a flurry of anti-haitian actions.

He suspended a student-visa program for Haitians, prohibited companies from drawing more than 20 percent of their workforce from migrant workers and ordered Haitian migrants to register their whereabout­s.

He announced an audit of some 220,000 people previously awarded immigratio­n status to determine if they still qualify, and he warned that anyone who provides transporta­tion or housing to undocument­ed migrants will be fined. And he suspended pension payments owed to hundreds of former sugarcane workers — most of them Haitian.

The measures follow Abinader’s announceme­nt in February that his administra­tion would build a multimilli­on-dollar, 118mile wall along the Haitian border.

In early November, Jesus Vazquez, Dominican minister of the interior and police, inaugurate­d the first of several dozen offices where foreigners will be required to register.

He told reporters: “The main threat that the Dominican Republic faces nowadays is Haiti, and we are called upon to defend our homeland.”

 ?? Matias Delacroix / Associated Press ?? A woman, who is denied entry into the Dominican Republic, tries to put on her protective face mask as a soldier removes her from a line for not initially wearing the mask, at the border crossing in Dajabon, Dominican Republic, last month.
Matias Delacroix / Associated Press A woman, who is denied entry into the Dominican Republic, tries to put on her protective face mask as a soldier removes her from a line for not initially wearing the mask, at the border crossing in Dajabon, Dominican Republic, last month.
 ?? ?? Haitian migrants, detained by immigratio­n officials in Dajabon, Dominican Republic, step out of a bus to be deported.
Haitian migrants, detained by immigratio­n officials in Dajabon, Dominican Republic, step out of a bus to be deported.

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