The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20080109194929/http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37018
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Deport Thy (Darker-Skinned) Neighbour
Wednesday, January 09, 2008   19:49 GMT    
IPS Direct to Your Inbox!
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Africa
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Asia-Pacific
     Afghanistan
     Iran
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Caribbean
      Haiti
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Europe
      Union in Diversity
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Latin America
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Mideast &
   Mediterranean
      Iraq
      Israel/Palestine
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - North America
      Neo-Cons
      Bush at War
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
 - Development
      MDGs
      City Voices
      Corruption
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Civil Society
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Globalisation
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Environment
      Energy Crunch
      Climate Change
      Tierramérica
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Human Rights
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Health
      HIV/AIDS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Indigenous Peoples
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Economy & Trade
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Labour
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Population
      Reproductive Rights
      Migration&Refugees
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Arts & Entertainment
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Education
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - ExPress Freedom
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Columns
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - In Focus
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Readers' Opinions
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Email News
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
  What is RSS?
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
Subscribe
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ENGLISH
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ESPAÑOL
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   FRANÇAIS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ARABIC
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   DEUTSCH
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ITALIANO
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   JAPANESE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   NEDERLANDS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   PORTUGUÊS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   SUOMI
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   SVENSKA
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   SWAHILI
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   TÜRKÇE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
PrintSend to a friend
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Deport Thy (Darker-Skinned) Neighbour
By Di�genes Pina

SANTO DOMINGO, Mar 21 (IPS) - Discrimination against Haitians living in the Dominican Republic, whether or not they have their papers in order, is a persistent problem in this country. Most Haitians live on the fringes of Dominican society.

This country is a long way away from overcoming the problem of segregation of Haitians and their children, in spite of Haitians being the only people to share the island of Hispaniola with Dominicans, different observers acknowledge.

"Here, people are discriminated against because they're darker-skinned," Jesuit priest Regino Mart�nez, who ministers in the border town of Dajab�n, 300 kilometres northwest of Santo Domingo and 250 kilometres from Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, told IPS. "People are deported, mistreated and abused simply because they're Haitian or especially dark-skinned," said Mart�nez, who is head of the non-governmental Border Solidarity project, founded in 1997 by the Jesuits with the aim of promoting and strengthening interrelationships between community organisations on the northwest border of the country.

Mart�nez said that "they round up and deport (Haitians) even when their papers are in order." The main factor determining repatriation, he asserted, is "how dark their skin is," as Haitians tend to be darker than Dominicans.

The Dominican Republic itself has a high proportion of Afro-descendants. Eleven percent of Dominicans are black, and 73 percent are mulattoes, the offspring of Spaniards and Africans.

The depth of the problem was made plain when Dominican President Leonel Fern�ndez said on Mar. 10 that his administration would not abide by an Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruling with regard to Dominican children Dilcia Yean and Violeta Bosico, whose parents are of Haitian descent.

The girls, aged 10 and 12, were refused birth certificates in the Dominican Republic, where they were born and still live. They were stateless persons until September 2001, and one of them, Violeta Bosico, was prevented from attending school for one year because of this, according to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which referred the case to the Court.

The Court ruled in October 2005 that the Dominican state had violated the girls' rights to nationality and equality, enshrined in its national laws and established in Articles 20 and 24 of the American Convention on Human Rights.

The ruling ordered that their birth certificates be issued, and that the state publicly acknowledge its responsibility and apologise to the victims Dilcia Yean and Violeta Bosico and their parents within six months, in the presence of public authorities, the victims and their next of kin.

The purpose of the public act, which should be disseminated by the media, is to provide "a measure of satisfaction and (to) serve as a guarantee of non-repetition," the Court added. It also ordered the state to pay 22,000 dollars in reparations and expenses to the victims and their representatives.

Foreign Minister Carlos Morales said last year that the state accepted the judgment and would act accordingly.

After a few months had passed, and everything indicated that the authorities would comply with the Inter-American Court resolution, the unexpected statement by President Fern�ndez, made in Puerto Rico, where hundreds of thousands of Dominicans live, fell like a bucket of cold water on those hopes and expectations.

The Jesuit Service for Refugees and Migrants (SJRM) said that Fern�ndez's statement was "deplorable".

However, the on-line news site Clave Digital, citing a government source who requested anonymity, reported Monday that the Dominican authorities have already paid the compensation. Wednesday is the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, proclaimed by the United Nations in 1966. The date was chosen because on Mar. 21, 1960, South African police killed 69 people when they fired on a peaceful demonstration against apartheid, the white segregationist regime abolished in 1994.

But racism and segregation still persist in many places around the world. "They are present here, in the Dominican Republic, and the government ought to implement mechanisms and policies that are in line with international laws," the coordinator of Mesa para las Migraciones, Eddy Tejada, whose organisation is part of the Regional Network of Civil Organisations on Migration, told IPS.

"Until we understand that Haitians are our neighbours, there will be conflicts between us," he said. The two countries share an island with an area of 77,914 square kilometres, of which over 48,000 square kilometres are Dominican territory. The border with Haiti is 380 kilometres long.

According to unofficial figures, there are over 800,000 Haitians living in the Dominican Republic, which has a population of 8.5 million. The population of Haiti is 8.3 million.

A survey of representatives of educational institutions, published in 2005, found that 86 percent of interviewees thought that Dominican society is racist, which is expressed by insults, verbal abuse, humiliation and injustice in its treatment of especially dark-skinned people.

In this country, "racism and prejudice towards other groups of human beings is exacerbated in the case of Haitian nationals, not only because of historical issues but also for geographical, social and economic reasons," says the report on "Racial Attitudes in the Dominican Republic", produced by the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO) at the request of SJRM.

Haiti is the poorest country in the Americas, and has been afflicted with political instability and internal violence for decades. Since President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was overthrown in February 2004, a United Nations multinational peacekeeping force remains deployed there.

In Tejada's opinion, the Dominican state even foments discrimination through its laws. The law on migration approved by the senate in August 2004 "was designed to be anti-Haitian, because its intention is to chase away Haitian immigrants," he said.

Article 49 of the law stipulates that the government's National Migration Council, created by the same law, shall decide on quotas of temporary workers allowed to enter Dominican territory, after consultations with the business community, farmers and trade unions.

Tejada pointed to the discriminatory nature of the paragraph that states that foreign temporary workers "may not work in free zones or tourism businesses, except in border areas," and then only if prior agreements are in force.

Mass deportations of Haitians by the Dominican authorities are on the increase. In 2003, 14,700 people were sent back to Haiti; in 2004, 15,464; and in 2005, 20,811, according to a report on "Haitian Migration and Human Rights," by the Support Group for Refugees and Repatriated Persons (GARR).

"Repatriations affect all ages and both sexes, without any respect for the number of years that the person has been living in the Dominican Republic. Most of those deported are men," the report says.

(END/2007)

Send your comments to the editor

HAITI/DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Exhibit Reveals a Bitter Harvest
MIGRATION-LATIN AMERICA: No Destination
HEALTH: Sick of Racism - October 2004
IPS News Feeds News Feeds RSS/XML
Make IPS your homepage Make IPS News your homepage!
Free Email Newsletters Free Email Newsletters
IPS Mobile IPS Mobile
Text Only Text Only
SIGN UP for the new IPS biweekly newsletter on Migration & Refugees!

Around the world, flows of refugees and migrants influence the social, economic and political dynamics of their destinations, creating dialogue between civilisations. Migrants themselves become the building blocks of bridges between cultures.
Mid-Way to 2015 - millennium Development Goals
POLITICS: Is There a Gender-Specific Leadership Style?
POLITICS: Mum, Can a Man be President?
PORTUGAL: Gap Between Rich and Poor Yawning Wider and Wider
CONGO: Fear, Stigma Undermine Fight Against Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission
HEALTH-US: A Million Attractions, but Nowhere to Go
ARGENTINA: Mixed Marks for Educational System
Q&A;: Cape Verde - Good Student, Reluctant �Example�
MEXICO: A Naked Call for Indigenous Peoples� Right to Land
SOUTH AFRICA: Government Set To Reach Sanitation Target. Is it Enough?
DEVELOPMENT-BURKINA FASO: "Sanitation Costs a Lot, But It's Not a Luxury"
More >>
 Inter-American Court ruling, in PDF
Digg icon
 Share this story
AddThis Feed Button