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Neighborly
Quarrels: The Dominican Republic and the Perennial Haitian
Immigrant Issue
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Mass expulsions of Haitians from the neighboring Dominican
Republic have increased in recent months.
• These expulsions are a part of a larger trend of Dominican
maltreatment of Haitian residents of the DR, including the
migrant worker sector that constitutes a substantial portion
of the DR’s economy.
• Santo Domingo has not provided a strong leadership role in
the matter; neither has Port-au-Prince sufficiently defended
the rights of Haitians in the DR.
• In compliance with international law and in the interests
of both countries, the DR must give Haitians the rights that
they deserve.
• Haiti, in turn, needs an influx of foreign aid to create
an environment of security and stability to stem the tide of
refugees across the border.
On
May 16, 2005, a Dominican military truck stopped in front of
the Francisco del Rosario Sanchez High School in the northwest
Dominican Republic (DR). Soldiers jumped out and began to pull
students out of the school courtyard and onto the back of the
truck. As they stood bewildered on the truck’s bed while it
later drove from the school, the students began to realize
that the soldiers’ mission was to send them across the
border to Haiti.
The northwest DR had seen an upsurge in violent anti-Haitian
attacks in response to the brutal murder of a Dominican
shopkeeper, which was falsely blamed on a group of Haitian
immigrants. These retaliations left three Haitians dead and
hundreds injured. The Dominican government responded by
rounding up Haitians in the region and deporting them back to
their native country. Yet among the 2,500 who were summarily
expatriated were many Dominican citizens and legal Haitian
immigrants – some of whom had their official documents
destroyed upon being presented to the military roundup crews.
Children were taken directly from schools like Francisco del
Rosario Sanchez, separated from their families and dropped
into Haiti, a country which many of them had never known.
Haitians living in the area went into hiding, fearful of
roving vigilantes and of the military trucks that would ship
them back to their impoverished homeland. Unfortunately, this
distressing chapter is but one in a larger history of tense
race and cultural relations between the DR and its Haitian
population.
A
Brief History of Dominico-Haitian Relations
The Dominican Republic is unique in Latin America in being one
of only two countries that does not celebrate its independence
from a European power (Panama is the other). A year after
gaining its “ephemeral” independence from Spain in 1821,
the DR was conquered by neighboring Haiti, with which it now
shares the island of Hispaniola. Santo Domingo (as the DR was
then called) suffered under Haitian rule for 22 years -- a
period that was marked by severe political repression and
widespread resentment amongst Dominicans. The occupation
lasted until 1844, when Dominican revolutionaries drove out
their Haitian occupiers and established the Dominican Republic
as an independent state.
Dominicans
continue to harbor significant acrimony and distrust toward
Haiti as a result of this unique aspect of their country’s
founding. This history, and the various inflammatory versions
of it that were distributed through the state-run media and
school systems-especially under the Dominican dictator General
Rafael Leonidas Trujillo-has created the perception that Haiti
and Haitian immigrants are a threat to the territorial
integrity of the DR.
While
this antipathy tends to simmer below the surface of relations
between Dominicans and Haitian immigrants, there have been
several significant events in which the animosity has erupted
into inexcusable violence. The most infamous of these was the
slaughter of as many as 37,000 Haitians in 1937 under the rule
of General Trujillo. This incident, sparked by dubious reports
of massive Haitian immigrant infiltration across the border,
was largely responsible for the gruesome reputation of the
Trujillo dictatorship. It inspired international opprobrium
for the regime, and has left an indelible mark on Dominico-Haitian
relations to this day.
Since
this atrocity, the Dominican government has continued to
episodically pursue discriminatory policies toward Haitians
while carefully attempting to mask such procedures under a
veneer of border security. Under the decades of rule by
President Joaquín Balaguer, the DR instituted periodic purges
of Haitian cane cutters, evicting workers back to the
repressive environment that flourished under the brutal rule
of Haitian dictator François Duvalier. Even into the 1990s,
as a modest degree of democracy began to take root in the DR,
Dominican presidents, like current President Leonel Fernández,
continued to expatriate Haitians en masse whenever
their presence could be blamed for domestic unrest. Michele
Wucker, author of Why the Cocks Fight, the definitive
study of modern Dominico-Haitian relations, told COHA that
“[Dominican] politicians often take advantage of
uncertainty” to exploit Haitians as scapegoats. According to
Wucker, this phenomenon contributes to “social learning in
Dominican society,” which encourages anti-Haitian
discrimination by the Dominican people. To this day, many
Dominicans fear that Haiti plans once again to conquer the
entire island, either by military force or miscegenation.
Yet
the historical underpinnings underlying anti-Haitian sentiment
in the DR do not tell the whole story. Much of the prejudice
against Haitians living in the DR can be attributed to the
previously cited widespread Dominican beliefs about skin color
and its correlation to social class. Dominicans often downplay
their African ethnicity, belying a deep ambivalence in regard
to their true heritage. This cultural attitude is partially
responsible for the widespread anti-Haitian sentiment in the
country. Many Dominicans associate dark skin with a lower
social status, and even darker skinned Dominicans face daily
discrimination as a result of such prejudice. As history has
shown, such animosity toward dark skinned people in the DR has
often manifested itself in summary deportations and even
ethnic violence. It is this kind of endemic prejudice that
prevented one of the DR’s greatest patriots of the modern
period, the late José Francisco Peña Gomez, from ever being
president of the country because of his dark skin and Haitian
ancestry.
When
Bad is the Best: No Other Options
The Dominican government undertook the most recent round of
expatriations ostensibly to protect Haitians from anti-Haitian
violence that had erupted in the DR. However, these round-ups
corresponded closely with the end of the need for seasonal
workers, who are overwhelmingly Haitian – indicating that
the deportations were yet another act of political and
economic opportunism. These workers supplement the DR’s
agricultural and building sectors, in which labor conditions
are dangerous, workers are paid shamefully low wages and are
rarely respected. In spite of the unpleasant conditions,
Haitians flock across the border in the hope of finding jobs.
In the face of a homeland unable to provide basic rights for
its citizenry due to perpetual political and economic turmoil,
Haitians often have nowhere to go but to the DR, where they
can at least find work and basic subsistence, no matter how
marginal.
Although
the DR is no socio-economic haven itself (61% of the budget
goes to debt repayment, there is 17% unemployment, and 25% of
the population lives below the poverty line), it is still
considerably more affluent than Haiti, whose per capita income
constitutes only one-quarter of its better off neighbor’s.
Though no official figures are available, estimates indicate
that between 400,000 and 1 million Haitians currently live in
the DR. This number is only expected to increase, as
prevailing dismal conditions under Haiti’s hapless interim
government continue to push poor Haitians who are desperate
for work across the border.
DR:
Not a Friendly Neighbor
The expulsions and violations of Haitians’ human rights by
the Dominican authorities break rights agreements, which the
DR has ratified on numerous occasions. Reports by Human Rights
Watch in the DR detail incidents of detained Haitians being
stripped of visas, identification, and belongings before being
summarily deported, without the opportunity to contact friends
or relatives. Furthermore, the DR fails to abide by the
standards of nationality prescribed by its constitution. Among
those deported to Haiti are Dominican-born residents of
Haitian descent, who should be considered legal Dominican
citizens according to Article 11 of that country’s
constitution.
In
1995, the National Coalition on Haitian Rights (NCHR)
undertook a mission to the DR with the goal of generating
information on the status of Haitian residents. This
investigation concluded that the DR government is negligent
towards the immigrants, and that it needs to initiate a
program to normalize their status. Today, ten years later, no
such program has been created. In a recent interview with COHA,
NCHR executive director Jocelyn McCalla confirmed that
conditions have remained stagnant, and the problems that have
plagued Haitians and Dominicans of Haitian descent persist.
However,
this irregular enforcement of national laws goes beyond
citizenship concerns. Ms. Wucker told COHA that much of the
anti-Haitian violence in the DR today occurs because many
Dominicans believe that the police will overlook attacks on
Haitians no matter how vicious or unjustified. Clearly, such
perceived impunity increases the potential for violence, and
it owes itself fundamentally to the failure of the Dominican
justice system to assure prosecution for all crimes committed
(against Haitians or others) in the country.
The
Complexity of the Issue
The issue of Haitians in the DR should not be viewed solely
through the lens of Dominican prejudice toward Haitians. In an
interview with COHA, Dominican ambassador Flavio Dario Espinal
Jacobo commented, “From the perspective of the Dominican
Republic, the issue of Haiti has to be seen in its own
complexity.” Indeed, one of the intricate features of the
Haitian situation is its longevity; the country has been in
crisis for twenty years, and the DR has seen a constant influx
of Haitians since the beginning of the turmoil. Tending to the
national security issues of another country is one thing;
endeavoring to uphold domestic stability in the face of rapid
demographic evolution is another. If the DR were to experience
unrest or upheaval - a scenario quite possible in light of its
proximity and interdependence with Haiti - it could cease to
be of any help to Haitians and to its own citizenry as well.
While
blanket statements should not be made about the generally
negative nature of the Dominican reaction to Haitian migrants
and refugees, generalizations about Haitians as a societal
burden are equally fallible. Haitians contribute significantly
to the Dominican economy, primarily in backbone industries
like construction and agriculture. These sectors represent 24
and 17 percent of the gross economy respectively, and are full
of jobs that Dominicans have been unwilling to perform for
decades. Haitians have stepped in to fill these needed roles,
and as a direct result the Dominican economy has benefited.
The crucial role that the Haitians workers fill is highlighted
by the fact that the DR’s net migration has been negative
– for 2005, the CIA World Factbook estimates a net
loss of 3.02 people for every 1000 inhabitants in the DR—and
for this reason there are major lacunae in the Dominican labor
force.
It is undeniable that a significant percentage of Dominican
society is comprised of Haitians; it is also undeniable that
these Haitians are vital to the funcioning of the Dominican
economy. The DR seems to use its immigration policy to its
self-serving political and economic advantages, and it often
behaves hypocritically by treating Haitians on its territory
with scorn and abuse while exploiting their presence. To
recruit immigrants to do dirty work only to throw them back to
the wolves when they are no longer an economic necessity goes
beyond the violation of international law--it represents a
shameless indecency for which there is no viable excuse.
So far, Santo Domingo has not provided much leadership in the
deportation situation. President Leonel Fernández has stated
that he “regrets” the mass repatriations,
acknowledging that they violate human rights standards, but
Dominican authorities continue to deport Haitians without
consequence. In a June 23 conference on border issues, Fernández
voiced intentions to create better repatriation policies, even
mentioning possible cooperation with the Organization of
American States. However, on the same day these statements
were made, Dominican immigration authorities expelled 200
Haitians from the city of Santiago. These ironically
concurrent events confirm that prospects for real change
remain dubious, for Fernández´s song has been sung for years
by Dominican policy-makers without producing tangible
improvements.
Port-au-Prince, for its part, has also failed to provide
much-needed leadership. In a time when Haitians in the DR need
their government to vocally defend their rights, their leaders
have largely ignored the issue. In a recent interview with
COHA, a representative from a refugee aid center working on
the Haitian-DR border stated, “The current consulate
simply doesn’t care. The consulate staff under
[ex-president] Aristide provided a strong defense for Haitian
rights, but the current administration ignores the [Haitian]
citizens that live in the DR.” Just as is the case in
other areas, interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue has failed
to maintain domestic order as violence and economic despair
continue to escalate in Haiti, and human rights of Haitians
both in Haiti and in the DR have suffered needlessly under his
rule.
A
Call for Solidarity
In the weeks following the May 16 mass deportations, there
have been numerous clashes between Haitians and Dominicans in
reaction to the expulsions. These conflicts have ended up
threatening the peace and security of both of the island’s
countries, resulting in repeated acts of violence that often
have ended up in deaths as a result of the heightening
tensions between Haiti and the DR. Both for its own interests
and for Haiti’s, the DR would be wise to treat Haitian
refugees on its territory with greater respect. The DR must
improve its behavior by establishing due process for its
deportation proceedings and by creating equitable conditions
for migrant workers. The DR should also strengthen its law
enforcement procedures, both to ensure consistent application
of punishment for anti-Haitian crimes and to guarantee
adherence to constitutional provisions on nationality rights.
Haiti,
for its part, must work harder to ensure a secure and stable
domestic environment in order to stem the flow of migrants
across the border. This requires that the international
community redouble its aid campaign to support Haiti in this
initiative. Current international efforts are clearly
insufficient, as Haiti remains mired in sectarian violence
despite the presence of a UN stabilization force. Wucker
explains that “the relationship between the two countries is
worst at times when it seems there is no end to Haiti's
problems and no hope for a slowing of migration to the DR.”
If Haiti can achieve political stability and demonstrate
renewed economic growth, migration to the DR would drop off
and Dominican businessmen would benefit by investing in
Haiti’s economy. As Wucker says, “Haiti's crisis is more
an absence-of-opportunity situation that intensifies Dominican
frustration.” Clearly, the countries are codependent, and
one nation’s problems tend to spill across the border if not
addressed quickly. If stability cannot be achieved in Haiti,
the country has little hope for the necessary economic
development that will provide an alternative to the spirit of
lawlessness which continues to guarantee its primary export:
political unrest.
Conclusion
The mistreatment of Haitian refugees in the DR has been a
perennial impediment to improved bilateral relations on
Hispaniola. While this tension has deep roots in history,
Dominican society and Haitian instability, it can be addressed
through reforms in the Dominican justice system and by more
comprehensive international aid packages to rebuild Haiti. The
governments of both nations must prioritize measures such as
these in order for even modest progress to be made.
Efforts
by both countries to reduce bilateral tensions would allow the
DR and Haiti to pursue a more productive relationship. This
would facilitate joint actions on issues that affect the
entire island of Hispaniola, such as environmental protection,
drug trafficking and disaster relief. With heightened
solidarity, the countries could win for themselves a greater
international presence, and could become more influential in
hemispheric and regional agencies such as CARICOM and the
Organization of American States.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research
Associates Alicia Asper and Joseph Taves.
June
30, 2005
The Council on Hemispheric Affairs,
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