USA TODAY US Edition

Border smugglers transport contraband cargo of illicit eggs

Dominican produce is cheaper but restricted

- Amy Bracken Contributi­ng: Michel Joseph This is the second in a series on Haiti produced in associatio­n with Round Earth Media, which trains and supports young journalist­s around the world.

JIMANI, Dominican Republic – It’s dusk on market day at the Haitian-Dominican border. Throngs of Haitians have cleared Dominican trucks of their wares, stuffing diapers, brooms and food-flavoring mixes into buses and strapping the overflow to roofs for the return trip to Port-au-Prince.

Off the main drag, a smuggling operation is underway.

Men and women empty a couple of trucks, tying boxes with colored string and setting them in piles on the ground. Purchasers stack them on wheelbarro­ws and rush them to nearby Lake Azuei, where wooden boats stand ready for the trip to Haiti.

The contraband is eggs. Demand is high in Haiti, where malnutriti­on is a real threat for many people. Haitians eat more than 30 million eggs a month.

In 2008, after an outbreak of avian flu, Haiti essentiall­y banned Dominican eggs, which can cost half of what Haitian eggs do.

Haiti faces a dilemma familiar to many countries: Keep prices low by allowing free trade, or restrict imports and encourage domestic production, even though that is likely to drive up prices, at least in the short term.

Haitian officials tightened the border in an attempt to create an internal market. Instead, dysfunctio­n and lack of investment feed a vicious cycle that perpetuate­s Haiti’s status as the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country. The government has paid more attention to the border than to the other half of the strategy — boosting production. It hasn’t fully implemente­d either part, frustratin­g nearly everyone.

The border briefly reopened to Dominican eggs after a devastatin­g earthquake in 2010. But the next year, Haitian authoritie­s cracked down with greater determinat­ion. Four years later, they banned 23 more common items, including pasta, snacks and cement mix from crossing the land border, citing the inability of customs officers to properly inspect and levy duties. Those products continue to pass as contraband, helping fill the boats on Lake Azuei.

Though improving border controls might increase customs revenue, much of the public sees the effort as heavyhande­d and arbitrary, especially when it’s not accompanie­d by strong efforts to develop the economy. The patchwork of half-measures makes life in Haiti even more precarious.

Those bringing Dominican eggs into Haiti never know whether they will make it back to Port-au-Prince with their cargo or if it will be seized. Haitian producers brace for a glut of cheap eggs during the Dominican tourism industry’s off-season. Uncertaint­y makes banks reluctant to provide loans to new producers.

Much of what is sold in Port-auPrince comes from the twice-weekly market a couple of hours away in Jimani, where Haitians bargain heatedly before loading up and heading home.

Jocelyn Lefevre, who sells Haitian chickens and Dominican eggs in a Portau-Prince open market, railed against the government for the way he is treated at the border.

“The police chase us, and the customs agents take our stuff while letting other merchandis­e go through!” he said. It’s expensive to travel to the border and to change money, but it’s still a better deal than buying Haitian eggs.

One problem is the high cost of entering the poultry business in Haiti. To make a profit, an operation needs a minimum of 10,000 hens, said Michel Chancy, a former Ministry of Agricultur­e official who advises the government. Buying imported birds and cages, as most Haitian egg producers do, can cost $30 a bird, he said. The biggest expense after that is feed, the ingredient­s of which generally come from the USA.

Haiti Broilers, a joint Haitian-Jamaican company producing chicken near Port-au-Prince, expanded into the egg market four years ago and is the biggest supplier in Haiti, owning 400,000 hens. The expansion created 200 more jobs.

Dominique Charles Jean, hatchery manager for Haiti Broilers, said the company financed its Haiti operations by itself, but the government helped with paperwork that reduced import duties on feed and equipment.

Damoclès Termeus, who heads the Ministry of Agricultur­e’s unit on poultry production, foresees many more jobs in the growing egg and poultry industry, plus jobs for people growing corn and

“The police chase us, and the customs agents take our stuff while letting other merchandis­e go through!” Jocelyn Lefevre

other ingredient­s for feed. If the ministry prioritize­s egg production and invests every year, Haiti could reach selfsuffic­iency in eggs in 15 to 25 years, he said.

Termeus and Chancy said the government should provide technical assistance for producers, facilitate bulk purchases of feed for multiple producers and provide incentives for banks to lend at low rates. But Chancy said securing the border is still job one.

He knows it’s not easy. Last March, Chancy helped draft a plan to increase domestic egg production. The plan declared it “practicall­y impossible to eliminate egg contraband at the border” because of the interdepen­dence of the Haitian market and Dominican producers. But it’s worth working toward that goal, Chancy said, citing an increase in domestic production since 2011. “That interdicti­on is an opportunit­y for us to invest,” he said.

In the past six years, Haitian companies have gone from producing a million eggs a month to 7 million. That’s a lot of eggs, but it still means Haitian producers provide less than one per month for each of the country’s 11 million people.

Max Antoine, who heads the government commission on border management, said political instabilit­y has made it difficult to secure the border. There also are budget and morale problems. Smugglers have attacked agents, and customs posts have been burned.

Many merchants in Port-au-Prince hate their country’s reliance on imported food but also hate the government’s remedy. Jorel Hibart wants the government to focus on creating jobs and developing the economy. He doesn’t like depending on the Dominican Republic, which Haiti ruled long ago, but the idea that the government would cut his supply of eggs agitates him. If they do that, he cried, “We’ll all die in this country!”

 ??  ?? Phita, 36, a vendor who did not give her last name, prepares an omelet sandwich at the Salomon market in Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince. Most market vendors use eggs brought in illegally from the Dominican Republic because domestic eggs are too...
Phita, 36, a vendor who did not give her last name, prepares an omelet sandwich at the Salomon market in Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince. Most market vendors use eggs brought in illegally from the Dominican Republic because domestic eggs are too...
 ??  ?? Employees of a Dominican egg company unload a truck in Jimani, Dominican Republic, before the eggs are shipped across the border to Haiti. Jimani is the site of a major twice-weekly market, where Haitians come to buy many everyday items. Smugglers also...
Employees of a Dominican egg company unload a truck in Jimani, Dominican Republic, before the eggs are shipped across the border to Haiti. Jimani is the site of a major twice-weekly market, where Haitians come to buy many everyday items. Smugglers also...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States