The Guardian (USA)

US warns its ‘darker-skinned’ citizens of Dominican Republic’s migrant crackdown

- Richard Luscombe in Miami Additional reporting by the Associated Press

US officials in the Dominican Republic are warning “darker-skinned” Americans they are at risk of being swept up in the country’s crackdown on Haitian migrants.

The advice from the US embassy in Santo Domingo suggests that authoritie­s there are using a person’s appearance as a criteria for detention of those suspected of being in the country illegally.

The Dominican Republic says it has deported 43,900 migrants, mostly Haitians, between July and October in an operation it insists is necessary for national security amid growing unrest, gang crime and a fuel blockade inside its only neighbour on the island of Hispaniola.

The expulsions include hundreds of children sent to Haiti without their parents, according to Unicef, reported by CNN.

Several countries and human rights agencies have condemned the program of mass arrests and deportatio­ns, criticism the Dominican Republic government says it “profusely rejects”.

The US embassy’s warning came in a bulletin about “ongoing Dominican migration enforcemen­t” issued at the weekend.

“Dominican migration agents have conducted widespread operations aimed at detaining those they believe to be undocument­ed migrants, especially persons of Haitian descent,” it says.

“In some cases, authoritie­s have not respected these individual­s’ legal status in the Dominican Republic or nationalit­y. These actions may lead to increased interactio­n with Dominican authoritie­s, especially for darkerskin­ned US citizens and US citizens of African descent.”

It goes on to warn of reports of detainees being held “without the ability to challenge their detention, and without access to food or restroom facilities, sometimes for days at a time”.

Notably, the approach taken by American officials does not extend to calling for an end to the deportatio­n program, as others, including Volker Türk,United Nations high commission­er for human rights, have done.

The US maintains its own program for the expulsion of Haitian migrants, for which it has also been heavily criticized.

In defending its position on the deportatio­ns, the Dominican Republic says there is “no evidence” of any systemic human rights violations, as suggested in the US embassy’s bulletin.

Its ministry of foreign relations said in a statement: “The Dominican government never could have imagined there would be such a harsh insinuatio­n made about our country, much less from an ally that has been subject to accusation­s of xenophobic and racist treatment of migrants, including in parts of its own population.”

Tensions between Haiti and the Dominican Republic, which share a 240-mile (390km) border on the island of Hispaniola, have worsened since the 2021 assassinat­ion of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse.

Deportatio­ns from the Dominican Republic since have escalated, and the country’s government has increasing­ly militarize­d its border, even beginning constructi­on of a border wall.

President Luis Abinader last week called the comments by UN human rights chief Türk as “unacceptab­le and irresponsi­ble”.

He said his country “has been more affected” by Haiti’s problems and steady migration and “more supportive than any other country in the world”.

“You can’t ask anything more from the Dominican Republic. We’re going to continue the deportatio­ns and next week we’re going to increase them,” he said.

 ?? ?? Haitians wait to cross the border in Dajabon, Dominican Republic. Photograph: Matias Delacroix/AP
Haitians wait to cross the border in Dajabon, Dominican Republic. Photograph: Matias Delacroix/AP

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