Dominican Republic
Haitian Man Lynched Amid Dominican Republic Immigration Controversy
Huffington Post - The corpse of a Haitian man was found hanging from a tree in a public park in the Dominican Republic’s second-largest city [last] Wednesday morning, according the newspaper Listín Diario.
Local police said the killing in Santiago appeared to have occurred during a robbery. But human rights groups and other observers pointed out that the crime comes amid a furious debate over immigration from neighboring Haiti and a decade-long series of legal measures that have stripped birthright citizenship from thousands of Dominicans of Haitian descent.
The victim, identified by the newspaper only by his nickname Tulile, worked shining shoes in Ercilia Pepín Park, where his body was found, according to Listín Diario. His hands and feet were bound, according to Dominican daily Diario Libre.
A spokesman for the Santiago police tweeted that investigators had “rejected racism as a motive,” and said investigators believed the killing resulted from a robbery.
Police declined to speak about the case by telephone with The Huffington Post.
Many view anti-Haitian sentiment in the Dominican Republic as racist in nature because the vast majority of Haitians and their Dominican-born descendants are black. Most Dominicans are mixed-race or white, and 11 percent are black, according to the CIA World Factbook.
Wade McMullen, an attorney with the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights, said investigators appeared to have discounted race as a motive too quickly.
"For the Dominican authorities to rule out racism as a factor less than 24 hours after a man of Haitian descent was hanged in a public square is not just irresponsible policing, it is an outrageous example of discrimination endemic to the Dominican Republic," McMullen wrote to HuffPost in an email. "And frankly it is all too reminiscent of the shameful denials of Southern officials during the decades of terror lynchings perpetrated against African-Americans here at home."
Anti-Haitian sentiment runs high among some in the Dominican Republic. A small group of Dominican nationalists gathered in Santiago the day before the Haitian man's body was found to burn a Haitian flag and call for deportations of Haitian migrants.
A series of legal measures since 2004 have done away with birthright citizenship, and a decision by the Constitutional Court in 2013 applied the new standard retroactively, requiring the federal government to strip citizenship from Dominicans born after 1929 to undocumented Haitian parents.
A law passed in 2014 created a pathway for those who lost their citizenship to normalize their status. Fewer than 9,000 people applied, however. Human rights organization Amnesty International says that as many as 110,000 qualify.
Marselha Gonçalves Margerin, Amnesty International’s advocacy director for the Americas, said the human rights watchdog was “monitoring the situation” and urged the authorities to vigorously investigate the hanging.
“Amnesty International recalls that authorities have the obligation to thoroughly investigate the case like in any case of allegation of homicide,” Gonçalves Margerin wrote in an email to HuffPost, “but given the particular context going on in the country, special attention should be given whether it was a hate crime based on the origins or racial characteristics of the person.”
Still in Dominican Republic:
The Haitian Flag was burned
In Santiago in the Dominican Republic, organizations from the neighborhood of "Le Ciruelitos", burned a Haitian flag in the street, in what they described as an act of rebellion against the laissez-faire attitude of the Dominican government, in the face of an invasion of Haitian immigrants without papers.
JetBlue will connect Boston to Port-au-Prince
Last Wednesday, JetBlue Airways, the biggest airline company at Logan International Airport in Boston (BOS), announced three new seasonal flights without layover from Boston, one of which will be bound for Port-au-Prince.
JetBlue will offer the only connections without layover from Boston to Port-au-Prince.
The new service towards Port-au-Prince will be launched June 17th and will continue until September 5th, 2015 with flights on Wednesdays and Saturdays. It is subject to the government’s approval. The service to Haiti will complete JetBlue’s daily flights to Haiti. These include one daily flight from New York’s John F. Kennedy’s International Airport (JFK), and two daily flights from Fort-Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL).
Special launch rates will be available starting Wednesday, February 12th, 2015, from $149, for one way tickets to Port-au-Prince between August 15th and September 2nd, 2015, Wednesdays and Saturdays only. Advance purchase 21 days prior to travel date is required. Prices are subject to availability, cannot be available on every day or every flight, and can change without advance notice. Special promotions must be presented at the time of the reservation and are for one-way, non-stop (unless otherwise specified). They are not refundable and not transferable.
To make reservations, visit www.jetblue.com
The Mobilization, it is not finished …
The national platform of labor unions of faithful transport (PNFTS), regrouped about twenty public transportation labor unions in Port-au-Prince, and in provincial towns, and announced that the mobilization for the reduction of gas prices will resume after the Carnival.
Cette marche est une initiative du COLLECTIF QUATRE DECEMBRE.
Tôt le matin, les participants ont commence à se masser au Champs de Mars, devant le Monument de Dessalines.
On distinguait parmi ceux ayant reepondu à l’invitation du Collectif, des gens de tous ages, vieux , comme très jeunes. Des personnalités politiques, des représentants de laSociété Civile, des Avocats revêtus de leurs toges, des artistes et des enfants revêtus de leur uniformes d’école accompagnés de leurs professeurs.
Ils brandissaient le bicolore haitien mais aussi des affiches pour relancer la fierté haïtienne . Certains slogans, cependant étaient loin d’être pacifiques et se distinguaient par leur caractère haineux, face aux Dominicains qui n’ont jamais cessé d’écraser les Haïties obliges d’aller travailler chez eux.
La marche s’est ébranlée à partir de 10 heures du matin comme prévu et s’est dirigée vers le Ministère haïtien des Affaires étrangères, où une Déclaration a été remise au Chancelier Duly Brutus, signee de nombreux citoyens, dénonçant les violations des droits des haïtiens en République Dominicaine.
La marche s’est scindée en deux.
Une partie des marcheurs prenant la direction du Consulat dominicain, dans le quartier de l’église Ste Thérêse, tandis que l’autre s’est difigée vers l’ambassade de la République dominicaine, Avenue Pan américaine.
Des hommes politiques, entre autres Dieuseul Simon Desras, Charles Henry Baker, Maryse Narcisse, Myrlande Manigat, le Sénateur, Steven Benoit, l'ancien sénateur Moïse Jean-Charles, des parlementaires et anciens parlementaires, des avocats en toge, des musiciens et de nombreux autres citoyens ainsi que Jean André Victor (MOPOD) ont été remarqués dans la foule, a proximité de l’Ambassade dominicaine.
Malgré la présence devant le Consulat de quelques Agents de l’Unité Départementales de Maintien de l’Ordre (UDMO) et de 2 ou 3 agents de la PNH, un manifestant est parvenu à escalader les grilles et à accéder au toit du Consulat, pour décrocher le drapeau Dominicain avant de le lancer en pâture, à une foule électrisée, qui hurlait des propos et des menaces le poing levé...
Deux autres manifestants sont parvenus aussi sur le toit et malgré la présence d’un agent de l’UDMO et d’un policier présent sur le toit, ils ont pu déployer au vue de tous, notre Bicolore sous les cris de liesse d’une foule en délire. Il a est a noter que les forces haïtiennes sur le toit, ne se sont pas vraiment opposées et ont laissé faire les manifestants, tout comme les forces de l’ordre haïtiennes protégeant le Consulat, qui se contentaient d’appels au calme, n’osant vraisemblablement pas chercher un affrontement avec une foule prête à tout et hors contrôle, vu la faiblesse des effectifs policiers sur place...
Après le déploiement du drapeau haïtien sur le Consultat, un geste symbolique, que plus d’un a considéré comme une victoire, le drapeau dominicain a été brûlé et piétiné dans l’allégresse et la haine...
Par ailleurs, avant ce déplorable et grave événement diplomatique, José Ricardo Taveras, le Directeur de l'immigration dominicaine a appelé les autorités haïtiennes à la « prudence, la modération et à la retenue » en réponse à ce qu'il défini comme une campagne de racisme à l'encontre de la République Dominicaine. Il a demandé aux autorités haïtiennes à ne pas participer à la campagne d'hostilité, initié par le Collectif du 4 Décembre. Le fonctionnaire a qualifié de « légèreté répréhensible et de manipulations contre le pays », la forme irresponsable et l’intervention dans la question haïtienne, par des groupes nationaux et internationaux.
Haiti withdraws offer to host OAS XLV General Assembly
The Permanent Council of the Organization of American States (OAS) took note today of the notification of the withdrawal of its offer to host the XLV (45th) General Assembly of the Organization due to “financial and logistical constraints” currently experienced by the Government of Haiti, as expressed by the country´s Foreign Minister, Duly Brutus, in a letter sent to the Secretary General of the OAS, José Miguel Insulza.
The Chair of the Permanent Council and Permanent Representative of Suriname to the Organization, Niermala Badrising, informed the representatives of the situation and reported that the discussion on the new site will be on the agenda of the next meeting of the Permanent Council.
Secretary General Insulza explained that the situation raised by the decision of Haiti “is foreseen both in the OAS Charter and the rules of the General Assembly,” which indicate that “if it cannot be held in the location previously chosen, it should be held at the headquarters of the Organization,” unless another member state offers to host the event at least three months ahead of time.
The letter from the Minister of Foreign Relations of Haiti, Duly Brutus, to the Secretary General explains that the withdrawal of the offer to host the event is due to “financial and logistical constraints that could affect organization of the forty-fifth regular session of the General Assembly and Haiti's ability to host a fruitful and outstanding General Assembly, given the electoral process that the Government of the Republic has set in motion.”
During the Council meeting, the Permanent Representative of Haiti to the OAS, Bocchit Edmond, added that “it has been a difficult decision for the Government of Haiti, because we wanted to host the event twenty years after the first time in Haiti. There are reasons beyond our control that have forced us to take this decision.”
The decision to name Haiti host of the XLV General Assembly had been taken by acclamation by the member states during the XLIV General Assembly, held last year in Asuncion, Paraguay.
Attack on consulate stuns Dominican Republic-Haiti ties
Herald staff with Télam
Santo Domingo.- The government of the Dominican Republic last night protested the attack on the Dominican Consulate in Haiti Wednesday which according to local media were thousands of people who marched to protest alleged Dominican racism.
The diplomatic crisis caps two weeks of incidents in the wake of the death of a Haitian national found hanged in a park in Santiago, the country’s second biggest city
In a press conference called in haste, Dominican Foreign minister Andrés Navarro said the country cannot accept the attacks on its consulate. "A group of people not only threw stones at the facilities of our consulate, but also broke into the interior of the property, and dared to take down the Dominican flag from its pole and tried to mutilate and burn it."
He noted that while the Haitian government didn’t sponsor the assault, it should take clear steps to halt to the violence against Dominicans interests in Haiti.
Navarro said the Dominican government has been cautious and patient in its response to such violence.
The official warned Haiti’s authorities however that patience has its limit, "and we have proven to the world that we’ve made the greatest efforts to maintain a healthy, productive, respectful relationship with the Haitian government.”
Navarro said the Dominican government has called its envoy in Port au Prince for consultation and issued a diplomatic note of protest over yesterday’s violence.
He said Dominican Republic has been subjected to an international campaign, accusing it of racism, in contrast to the solidarity shown by the government and the Dominican people toward Haiti.
Navarro called the crimes in the country in recent days including the murder of two Haitian nationals, and the burglary at the residence of Haiti ambassador Fritz Cineas isolated facts, to which Dominican authorities gave a resounding and swift response, and in no way stems from official policy of the Dominican government, for which "it’s unacceptable to accuse the country of racism and xenophobia against the neighboring nation."
The official’s statements respond to a letter of protest to a missive from his Haitian counterpart Pierre Duly Brutus, accusing Dominican Republic of fostering racist policies.
Just hours after Navarro’s statement, Haiti envoy Fritz Cineas was removed from the post and replaced with Daniel Supplice, an announcement that comes one day after a group of Haitians staged a protest in Haiti’s Embassy demanding faster access to documents to qualify for Dominican residency.
THE ROOT March 2nd 2015
Man Celebrates 108th Birthday and 82 Years of Marriage to 104-Year-Old
Duranord Veillard knows a lot about longevity, but Saturday is a milestone for the record books. USA Today reports that not only will Veillard celebrate turning 108, he will also celebrate 82 years of marriage to his wife Jeanne, who is 104.
The husband and wife are believed to be the oldest couple in New York’s Rockland County, the report says, and both will celebrate their birthdays this weekend. Veillard’s wife, Jeanne, will turn 105 in May, but both will celebrate their birthdays at their home this weekend with family, friends and others, notes the report.
Veillard, a native of Haiti, studied law and lived in Port-au-Prince. He married Jeanne in November 1932 and together they have raised five children. He obtained a visa to visit the United States in 1968 after losing his job as a judge and never looked back, the report says. He settled in Spring Valley, N.Y., and worked as lab technician at the Good Samaritan Hospital for 10 years before retiring.
During an early birthday celebration Thursday at the couple’s home, Jeanne recounted to USA Today how they met.
“I found him in the street,” she joked in Haitian creole to a room full of relatives, the news outlet writes.
The Veillards, who leave home only to go to the doctor, have 12 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren, the report notes.
During the celebration, Veillard revealed his secret to longevity: “That's God,” he said, USA Today writes.
The Veillards also nap early and often, the report notes.
Most peacekeepers in Haiti to return home
Buenos Aires Herald
The majority of Argentine United Nations peacekeepers based in Haiti will return to their country in April, signaling the virtual end to the Argentine commitment to the peace-keeping mission in the Caribbean island after 10 years, the government announced yesterday.
Argentina has been sending peacekeeping forces to Haiti since August 2004, when the UN established a peace mission in a resolution that had been ordered by the Security Council.
Argentine forces are returning after the UN mandated a downsizing of the peacekeeping mission in the island. The decision will not only affect Argentina, but also all the other countries that have contributed personnel.
Defense Minister Agustín Rossi, who was visiting the men and women working on the island, yesterday praised the forces, which are composed of Army, Navy and Air Force personnel. The Kirchnerite official participated in a United Nations award ceremony, where medals were given to several military groups working in Haiti — including Argentine peacekeepers.
“We are more than satisfied with the role played by Argentine armed forces throughout these 10 years,” Rossi said after visiting a hospital managed by Air Force in Haiti’s capital city, Port-au-Prince.The medical centre will continue operating in the country with a team of 70 officers, the majority being doctors and nurses.
CDC Leads Consortium Aimed At Eliminating Malaria From Hispaniola By 2020
CDC Foundation: Consortium Aims to Eliminate Malaria on Hispaniola by 2020 Starting With $29.9 Million Grant to CDC Foundation “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is leading a consortium of malaria partners aiming to eliminate indigenous cases of malaria on the island of Hispaniola by 2020. Acceleration of malaria elimination efforts will begin with a $29.9 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to the CDC Foundation…” (2/25).
Confident Obama predicts success in immigration appeal
MIAMI (AP) -- President Barack Obama urged immigrants thrown into limbo by legal wrangling to keep planning for eventual relief, professing confidence Wednesday that his deportation directives won't be thrown out in court.
"This is just one federal judge," Obama said of the district judge in Texas who put Obama's order on hold. "We have appealed it very aggressively. We're going to be as aggressive as we can."
Obama said he expected to win when a U.S. circuit court hears his appeal, but added that his administration will "take it up from there" if the appeal fails, in an apparent reference to the Supreme Court. He said at each stage of the process, the White House believes it has the better argument.
The strong-willed defense of Obama's executive actions came as millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally wait to see whether Obama's order shielding them from deportation will be upheld. A 26-state coalition led by Texas is suing Obama, alleging he overstepped his legal authority.
Dismissing those hoping for a presidential about-face, Obama insisted he was "absolutely committed" to the new policy, which he described as focusing deportation efforts on felons.
"People should be gathering up their papers, make sure you can show you are a long standing resident of the United States," Obama said at a town hall meeting hosted by the Spanish-language TV network Telemundo. He said immigrants should make sure that by the time the legal issues are sorted out, "you are ready to go."
As Obama spoke in Miami, another immigration drama was playing out in Congress, where lawmakers were attempting to fund Homeland Security over the insistence by some Republicans that Obama's immigration actions be repealed at the same time. Obama derided Republicans for holding national security funding hostage and said he would veto a stand-alone measure to repeal his actions being contemplated in the Senate.
The immigration dispute has increasingly taken on political overtones as focus shifts to the campaign for Obama's successor, raising questions about whether Republicans can appeal to the fast-growing number of Hispanic voters. Obama said the first question for 2016 presidential candidates should be whether they really intend to deport 11 million people living here illegally. If not, voters should demand to know their alternative plan, Obama said.
Of Jeb Bush, a likely Republican candidate who is one of his party's more moderate voices on immigration, Obama said he appreciated that the former Florida governor was concerned about fixing the immigration system.
"I would suggest he talk to the speaker of the House and the members of his party," Obama said.
Pour seulement les deux premiers mois de l’année 2015, les autorités dominicaines ont rapatrié 892 ressortissants-es haïtiens au point frontalier de Belladère, selon des données du Garr.
16 personnes, dont 12 hommes et 4 femmes, ont été rapatriées, le jeudi 5 mars, à la frontière de Belladère/Elias Piña (est) par des militaires dominicains, apprend AlterPresse.
Les quatre femmes ont été rapatriées sans leurs enfants, âgés pour la plupart de 14 mois à 8 ans, rapporte le Groupe d’appui aux rapatriés et refugiés (Garr), dans une note.
Ces gens ont été accueillis dans un état très critique aux environs de 2 heures de l’après-midi au bureau du Garr à Belladère.
La séparation de familles, surtout des mineurs de leurs parents, est pourtant contraire au Protocole d’accord sur les mécanismes de rapatriement, constamment violé par les autorités dominicaines.
98 migrants et migrantes haïtiens ont aussi été rapatriés à Belladère du dimanche 1er au mardi 3 mars 2015.
Plusieurs d’entre eux étaient arrivés aux environs de 10h pm contrairement au dit document qui interdit les rapatriements après 6h du soir pour les jours ouvrables et aux jours dimanches et fériés dans l’après midi.
Cette amplification des rapatriements survient après l’assassinat, entre autres, d’un migrant haïtien, Henry Claude Jean, le 11 février 2015.
Sur 70 hommes, 16 femmes et 12 enfants, 33 d’entre eux dont 14 hommes, 9 femmes et 10 enfants, ont été assistés par le Garr.
Résidant pour la plupart dans la province dominicaine de Azua depuis plus de 10 ans, ces migrants haïtiens sont originaires des départements de l’Artibonite, de la Grand’Anse et du Centre.
« Les risques demeurent plus grands pour les mois à venir, surtout à partir du mois de juin de 2015 », qui marquera officiellement la fin du plan national de régularisation des étrangers en situation irrégulière, en République Dominicaine (Pnre).
Pour l’année 2014, 2, 227 ressortissants ont été rapatriés au point frontalier de Belladère/Elias Piña dans le Plateau central, selon les données du Garr.
Le nombre total de rapatriés s’élevait à 5569, alors qu’au point frontalier de Jimani/Malpasse, 90 personnes avaient été rapatriés-es, selon les chiffres communiqués par le Service jésuite aux migrants (Sjm-Haïti), à la frontière du Nord-Est (Ouanaminthe/Dajabon).
Compte tenu de l’importance qu’a accordé l’ex-président du Venezuela à Haïti, Hugo Chavez, le Premier ministre, Evans Paul, dit qu’il était important, ce 6 mars 2015, marquant le 2e anniversaire de son décès, de saluer la mémoire de ce grand homme d’État et d’exprimer, au nom du gouvernement, la reconnaissance du peuple haïtien envers le peuple vénézuélien.
« Nous profitons de l’occasion pour dire merci au Venezuela pour tout son support à Haïti. Le fonds Petro caribe en témoigne bien. Nous n’avons pas oublié Hugo Chavez », .
Le chef de la Primature a également profité de l’occasion pour souligner que les relations bilatérales entre Haïti et le Venezuela sont au beau fixe ainsi que les relations trilatérales entre Haïti-Cuba-Venezuela.