I have read several articles in the recent days about the
issue regarding the deportation of thousands of individuals of Haitian descent.
I would like to share my thoughts on the matter since I have strong ties in
both countries and have gained considerable knowledge on the workings of both
societies. I will try to dissipate
some falsehoods that are being circulated by both sides on this argument.
There is not one problem but two. The first problem lies with the ruling of the constitutional court of
the Dominican Republic. This ruling which took place on September 23, 2013
reinterpreted what it meant to be “in transit” in the Dominican Republic. Why is that a problem? The Dominican Republic
grants “jus Soli” (the right of soil) to any baby who is born of residing
parents in the DR. This form of “restricted
Jus Soli” means that any baby born on the territory while their parents are “in
transit” would not be considered for citizenship. The ruling of 2013 formalized the definition
of “in transit” to include any baby born in DR to illegally residing parents. Personally,
I do not believe that part of the ruling to be a problem; the Dominican Republic has a right to take measures regarding its
future.
However, when a ruling in 2013
is applied retroactively to all
individuals born after 1929, I begin to think that some ulterior motives are at
play. Why? Because this law means
this : if I was born in 1930 of illegal migrant parents in the DR, I would be 85 years old today; my language is Spanish, my
culture is Dominican, my manners are Dominican. But, this law would cast me as
something else. I have no other nationality, where do you deport me to?
To understand who this law was created against, you need to
ask who it is going to impact the most. The simple answer is individuals of
Haitian descent. Tens of thousands of them have migrated to the DR mostly to
work on the sugarcane fields. This law is clearly aimed at their sons and
daughters. The problem is that those people are less Haitian than they are Dominican
because they don’t identify with Haiti. And who is to say that their parents
were Haitian if they have no papers proving so? I am guessing it is the color
of their skin. What the Dominican Republic is doing is simply rejecting a whole
group of individuals, born in the DR, of darker skins which gives a very racist
connotation to this law. These people share a Dominican identity and
casting them as Haitians is a major falsehood.
Because of this law, some defenders of Haiti have tried to
make the points that Dominicans are
racist and just hate Haitians. I am sorry but this is false.
Many think that the Dominican Republic is a rich country
compared to Haiti like the U.S is to Mexico. This is also false. The Dominican Republic
is a poor country, it is just a little less poor than Haiti. The DR also
benefits from relative political stability and direct foreign investment as a
result. But one only needs to walk the Dominican country side or the less
glamourous parts of its cities to see widespread poverty and hardship. The Dominican growth has not impacted the Dominican
masses in a meaningful way yet.
This brings us to the second part of the problem; the
perception of Haitian migration in the Dominican Republic. Many Dominicans live side by side with
Haitians. We have thousands of Haitian students and professionals living in the
DR who have no problem at all. They are legally in the country and their kids
are born Dominican with the full backing of the “Jus Soli”. They have Dominican
friends and wives and husbands who would defend them at all cost.
So how can such a law
pass if Dominicans do not hate Haitians?
Part of the answer resides with the poorer and often less educated Dominican.
This individual is often frustrated that the Dominican progress has not impacted
his life; he spends most his time in a low paying job making almost
nothing. Some Dominican politicians, who
have no immediate answers for these poor voting individuals, have pandered to
an old Dominican idea that the Haitian is the problem. Which Haitian? The poor black individual born
in DR or Haiti, who is willing to do the dirty jobs that our frustrated Dominican
does not even want. This is not a
particularly Dominican trait, most political parties in the world who have no
solutions to domestic problems will cast foreigners as the culprits; The Front
National is doing it in France, Hitler did it in 1939 and right wings parties
are doing it all over Europe. In other
words, I consider such laws to be a diversion that only solves a political
purpose. The Dominican Republic needs
poor Haitians to do its dirty jobs as it moves towards greater modernity.
Another side of the
same problem resides with Haiti itself. Haiti is a failed state that is
held alive by the international community.
Political instability is the elite’s favorite sport. It is a country of
men who have failed their country and all aspire to govern and embezzle the
meager resources of the state. The main victims are the poor Haitians who do
not see the light; they tend to buy a visa (or not) and cross the border with
the hope of no return. Looking from this
point of view, all deportations are not
bad.
Haitians need to remember that the Dominican Republic cannot
be turned into a place that absorbs the failures of Haiti’s elites. The Dominican
Republic needs that cheap unskilled labor if they are to continue to grow but
they have a right to stem the flow also. Haitians
need to take a look at themselves too rather than placing the blame of the
entire migration situation on the Dominican Republic.
Finally, we should not forget that the Dominican Republic
has more often than not been a good friend of Haiti; their economy requires it,
their geographical position demands it. This new law is only creating an unnecessary
problem on the island; an army of stateless individuals. Haiti (nor DR) cannot
prove those deported individuals are of Haitian descent but our main certainty
is that they were born in DR. The Dominicans should move ahead with their law,
retroactively apply it from January 2005 (our most affected individual would be
10 years old) and grant citizenship to those born before. This would send a
clear message that the Dominicans are serious about their immigration policies
without rendering stateless an army of individuals whose heart only beat for
the Dominican Republic.
( I am a Haitian citizen by the way)