SANTO
DOMINGO, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC — EXPERTS WARNED FRIDAY THAT A
DOMINICAN COURT DECISION TO STRIP CITIZENSHIP FROM CHILDREN OF
HAITIAN MIGRANTS COULD CAUSE A HUMAN RIGHTS CRISIS, POTENTIALLY
LEAVING TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE STATELESS, FACING MASS
DEPORTATION AND DISCRIMINATION.
Officials
promised to create a path to Dominican citizenship, but gave no
details about how it would work or who would be covered.
The
ruling by the Constitutional Court is final and gives the electoral
commission one year to produce a list of people to be excluded from
citizenship.
The
decision applies to those born after 1929 – a category that
overwhelmingly includes descendants of Haitians brought in to work on
farms. It appears to affect even their grandchildren, said Wade
McMullen, a New York-based attorney at the Robert F. Kennedy Center
for Justice & Human Rights.
A
U.N.-backed study released this year estimated that there are nearly
210,000 Dominican-born people of Haitian descent and roughly another
34,000 born to parents of another nationality.
Many
of those “are now effectively stateless,” McMullen said. “We
really don’t know what’s going to happen to those people …
Based on what the Dominican government is saying, these people are
not Dominican citizens and will have to leave and effectively go to
Haiti, where they are also not citizens. It creates an extremely
complicated situation.”
The
majority of them don’t have Haitian citizenship, have little or no
ties to Haiti and likely don’t speak Creole, he said. Getting
Haitian citizenship can be complicated too because it is difficult to
comply with requirements to prove descent from a Haitian national.
Roberto
Rosario, president of the electoral commission, insisted that the
government is not denying anyone the right to a nationality, saying
people would be able “to legalize themselves through the national
legalization plan.”
However,
that plan has not yet been created, despite a 2004 immigration law
that called for it, and it was not clear who would be covered.
Once
the plan is created and the electoral commission turns in its list,
it will take no more than two years for legalization, said
Immigration Director Jose Ricardo Taveras, member of a nationalist
party that has long complained about the “Haitianization” of the
Dominican Republic.
“Far
from remaining in limbo like some critics are arguing, (they) will
for the first time benefit from a defined status and identity without
having to violate the law,” he said.
Meanwhile,
the military announced that it had deported 47,700 Haitians caught
entering the country in the past year, more than double the nearly
21,000 deported in the previous year.
Roxanna
Altholz, associate director of the International Human Rights Clinic
at the University of California Berkeley School of Law, said she was
concerned about how the Dominican Republic has very deep roots of
violent racism against Dominican-Haitians and Haitians.
“Are
they going to do summary expulsions? Is the Dominican Republic going
to conduct raids? I don’t know how they’re going to implement
this decision,” she said.
The
Dominican government is currently analyzing the birth certificates of
more than 16,000 people, while electoral authorities have refused to
issue identity documents to 40,000 people of Haitian descent.
“To
all of a sudden be told no, you’re not Dominican, it’s very
frustrating,” said Elmo Bida Joseph, a 21-year-old student who said
he was denied his ID and a copy of his birth certificate because he
was born to Haitian migrants.
“All
my dreams have been broken,” said Bida, a baseball player who
needed those documents to enroll in a baseball academy.
Now
he worries he’ll be deported.
“I
feel that’s around the corner. That in any moment I’ll be
detained and they’ll send me to Haiti,” he said.
Spanish-speaking
Dominicans and Creole-speaking Haitians share the Caribbean island of
Hispaniola and have a long history of conflict and tense relations.
Haitian-American
author Edwidge Danticat said it was “appalling” that the
Dominican court has “chosen to commemorate the upcoming 76th
anniversary of the October 1937 massacre of thousands of Haitians in
the Dominican Republic by stripping Dominican-born men, women, and
children of Haitian descent of their citizenship, rendering them not
only stateless but unable to attend school or make a living while
becoming even more vulnerable to all kinds of hostilities including,
increasingly, physical violence.”
The
office of Haitian Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe declined to comment
about the ruling. The Dominican government estimates that some
500,000 people born in Haiti live in the Dominican Republic.
Until
2010, the Dominican Republic automatically bestowed citizenship to
anyone born on its soil. But that year, the government approved a new
constitution stating that citizenship will be granted only to those
born on its soil to at least one parent of Dominican blood or whose
foreign parents are legal residents.
“The
impact could be truly catastrophic,” said Jorge Duany, an
anthropology professor at Florida International University who has
studied the migration of Dominicans in the Caribbean. “They are
stigmatizing an entire Haitian population.”
Genesis 49:5
Simeon and Levi are brethren; instruments of cruelty are in their habitations.
Genesis 49:6
O my soul, come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly, mine honour, be not thou united: for in their anger they slew a man, and in their selfwill they digged down a wall.
Genesis 49:7
Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I will divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel.
Deuteronomy 28:54
So that the man that is tender among you, and very delicate, his eye shall be evil toward his brother, and toward the wife of his bosom, and toward the remnant of his children which he shall leave:
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