South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Wet foot, dry foot policies live on

Reason why only some Haitian boat refugees are sent back concerns advocates

- By Jacqueline Charles Miami Herald

MIAMI — A worrying rise in the number of Haitian refugees arriving by boat off the Florida coast is raising questions about a long-standing immigratio­n practice that determines why some fleeing migrants are processed into the United States and others are quickly returned back to Haiti despite making it into U.S. territoria­l waters.

In at least four different boat arrivals in the past five months, Haitian migrants who jumped off unseaworth­y, overloaded vessels and into the waters off the Florida Keys were plucked out by federal agents and brought to land for processing — while those who stayed onboard were transferre­d to U.S. Coast Guard cutters for repatriati­on.

One of the latest examples of the practice came Saturday, when 113 Haitian nationals on board an overloaded sailboat jumped into the shallow waters off the Florida Keys while 200 others remained on the vessel.

Those who remained on board the boat were placed on a Coast Guard cutter for repatriati­on to Haiti.

Three days later, a similar scenario played out when a second boat arrived Monday night after running aground in the shallow waters off the Middle Keys.

By the time federal agents arrived, 109 people were already on land and had been taken into custody.

However, 14 others who remained on the boat were immediatel­y taken away by the U.S. Coast Guard.

“This ‘wet foot, dry foot’ policy and sort of strict adherence to it has been a concern to advocates for 30 years. It is for that very reason it is very, very dangerous,” said Randolph McGrorty, executive director of Catholic Legal Services, which is run by the Archdioces­e of Miami. “People jumping into the water to avoid captured interdicti­on, it’s really dangerous and it always has been.”

McGrorty said while he understand­s “the policy of deterrence, deterrence should not be worse than what it is trying to deter, and we can’t risk people’s lives this way. They should be taken in, they all should be given” interviews to establish they have a credible fear if they are returned to Haiti.

Muzaffar Chishti, a lawyer and senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, says U.S. Coast Guard and Customs and Border Protection are guided by a protocol forged out of a 1993 Supreme Court decision that upheld both presidents George Bush and Bill Clinton’s policy of returning Haitians intercepte­d at sea back to Haiti without an asylum hearing — unless they say they have credible fear of harm if they are

returned.

But while there is a protocol on what to do about those found on board, he suspects what is happening is the result of a lack of policy governing what to do about those found wading or swimming in territoria­l waters.

“Once you’re in territoria­l waters, and they are not on the Coast Guard cutter, the fallback arrangemen­t is to bring them to land. What happens on land, we don’t know,” Chishti said, echoing another concern

among Haitian advocates about the Department of Homeland Security’s veil of silence surroundin­g Haitian migrants. “They don’t have a protocol to deal with people who are not on boats and since they don’t, they treat them as if they have entered the U.S. territory and then they treat them for asylum screenings somewhere on land.”

Like McGrorty, Chishti believes that the practice is “an incentive for people to take risks,” which he called “disturbing.”

Biden’s Haitian immigratio­n

Since January, the administra­tion has forcibly repatriate­d more than 20,000 Haitian migrants, including more than 6,100 intercepte­d at sea by the Coast Guard, according to the United Nations’ Office for Internatio­nal Migration. The repatriati­ons have surpassed that for all of last year, when 19,629 Haitians were repatriate­d from the U.S., and consist mostly of border

crossers who came into the U.S. at the Mexican border.

Still, while more Haitians have been expelled in the first seven months of the Biden administra­tion compared to the last seven months of President Donald Trump, Chishti said one “cannot say that we are systematic­ally discrimina­ting against all Haitians.”

“Many Haitians are deported, but you also have to be truthful that many Haitians are not,” Chrishti

said, referencin­g a study by him and a colleague for the Migration Policy Institute that shows that despite public perception­s, a higher number of Haitians have been allowed into the U.S. and not been subjected to rapid expulsions under the controvers­ial Trump-era,

COVID-19-related public health law known as Title

42. “We cannot say that there is an across-the-board racist policy toward Haitians. I can’t support there. Is there a disparate policy? Sure.”

Tom Ricker, who writes the blog Quixote, said while his own analysis of Customs encounters of Haitians at the border show more migrants are being allowed in than quickly expelled, it doesn’t mean that Haitians are being allowed to stay long-term, and many are being sent back to Haiti after several months.

Among migrants encountere­d at the U.S. southern border who end up on a flight back home, Haitians still lead the way, Ricker said, arguing that “as immigratio­n policies have gotten worse and worse, usually the worst gets tried against Haitians first, from detention to even the (Title 42) flights.”

“Many more Haitians are expelled as a percentage of encounters as opposed to folks from Nicaragua or Venezuela. It’s still a very discrimina­tory process,” he said.

Lack of clear policy

Advocates say the fact that they do not know what’s happening with Haitians after they either cross the border or taken ashore after arriving by boat is frustratin­g and raises concerns about whether they are getting due process to state their asylum claims.

“Based on what we are seeing now, I don’t think there is a clear immigratio­n policy,” said Cassandra Suprin, family defense program director for Miamibased Americans for Immigrant Justice, which works with migrants. “We are noticing a pattern. Title 42 is still being applied at the border, people intercepte­d at sea are being expelled, and people reaching U.S. soil are sometimes processed. Still, we aren’t sure what happens to all of the people and don’t have clarity on why.”

Suprin also said she doesn’t think the administra­tion’s approach toward undocument­ed Haitians trying to reach the U.S. is going to create a deterrent.

“At this point, there should be some sort of mechanism to see how they can at least be afforded the opportunit­y to request for asylum. Given the situation in Haiti, I don’t think what is going on right now is going to deter them,” she said. “There is a political issue in Haiti and this is not going to deter people when they have a genuine fear.”

A year after the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse, Haitians continue to face hardship, as inflation nears 30%, kidnapping­s surge and an increase in gang violence make living in the country risky and hopeless for many.

Over the weekend a former Haitian senator, Yvon Buissereth, who worked for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor, was burned alive in his car along with a relative by a criminal gang as they traveled in an upscale neighborho­od not far from the Pelerin 5 neighborho­od where Moïse was assassinat­ed.

Last month, gang violence in Cité Soleil, the country’s largest slum, left more than 470 people either dead, injured or missing over a span of nine days, according to the U.N. The violence, which has forced the displaceme­nt of thousands of Haitians, has according to UNICEF left 1 in 20 children at risk of dying from severe malnutriti­on.

‘Haiti has never been that bad’

“I am a born and raised Haitian and Haiti has never been that bad,” said Tessa Petit, the co-executive director of the Florida Immigrant Coalition.

Petit said she believes that despite being allowed in after being plucked out of the waters, Haitians are quietly being returned back to Haiti after being taken to a detention center where they are given to something to eat.

“It was reported to us that they were actually put on planes out of Florida, flown to other states where from there they are deported back to Haiti,” she said. “Some are allowed to apply for asylum, but if the person doesn’t know what to say or how to seek asylum they are deported by flight. That’s what we were informed.”

Petit said it is clear that there continues to be disparate treatment of Haitian migrants in comparison to others and this is why she and other advocates are continuing to push for humanitari­an parole for Haitians.

She and others also want an extension of Temporary Protected Status, the immigratio­n relief extended to Haitians after last July’s assassinat­ion of the president, which allows them to legally work and live in the U.S. on a temporary basis.

“What we are also working on and gearing ourselves to do is demanding from the administra­tion not only to extend TPS for Haitians come February 2023, but also that they do a re-designatio­n and move the date of the re-designatio­n, because the data shows that Haiti is unsafe,” she said. “It is unsafe for political reasons, which is the same reasons they are using for Venezuelan­s.”

Petit said when one considers the number of Haitians arriving in Puerto Rico and The Bahamas, it is clear that there is an ongoing “mass exodus” of Haitians by sea.

“If they are not finding any other options, and the U.S. embassy is not giving out visas... they are are going to look for the next way out, which is to get on a boat because Haiti has really gotten to a point where it is unlivable and unbearable.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Several people from a Haitian migrant boat jump in the water off the Ocean Reef community in north Key Largo on Aug. 6. They were part of a large migrant group of hundreds of people who arrived in an overloaded sailboat. Another sailboat carrying Haitian migrants arrived in the Middle Keys city of Marathon on Monday.
COURTESY Several people from a Haitian migrant boat jump in the water off the Ocean Reef community in north Key Largo on Aug. 6. They were part of a large migrant group of hundreds of people who arrived in an overloaded sailboat. Another sailboat carrying Haitian migrants arrived in the Middle Keys city of Marathon on Monday.

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