Background
and Purpose
The
island of Hispaniola is shared by the Dominican Republic,
the most developed economy
in the Caribbean, and Haiti the poorest country in
the western Hemisphere.
Although the two countries have not been in battle since the mid-1800’s
when the Dominican Republic gained independence from Haiti, the tumultuous
history still resonates deeply in both cultures, governments, and societies.
Despite racism, denial of citizenship, and the lack of rights, Haitians have
migrated to the Dominican Republic for both economic and political reasons.
Currently there are no accurate figures on the Haitian population in the Dominican
Republic due to a lack of documentation and circular migration, however it
is estimated that 500,000 – 1,000,000 Haitians live and work in the
Dominican Republic in the urban centers like the capital city of Santo Domingo
in the
informal sector and in the rural high and low lands working as day laborers
in the agriculture. The purpose of my trip to the Dominican Republic and
Haiti this summer had three objectives, the first was to work with a Dominican
non-governmental
organization (NGO) based out of Santo Domingo, El Movimiento Socio-cultural
de los Trabajadores Haitiano (The Socio-cultural Movement of Haitian Workers,
MOSCTHA), second was to conduct research on the situation of Haitian immigrants
and Dominicans of Haitian decent in the Dominican Republic specifically in
respect to economic and social rights, the third objective overlaps with
the second objective in laying the foundation for my future dissertation
research
in the Dominican Republic and Haiti by making contacts, networking, and becoming
familiar with the what type of work is currently being done in the country
concerning Haitian immigrants and refugees.
The
research and work accomplished in the Dominican Republic
and Haiti can be divided in to 5 different
sections: 1) I conducted interviews with all executive
directors of the major NGO’s working with Haitian
immigrants and refugees; 2) I attended a conference organized
by Peace Corps Dominican Republic, Peace Corps Haiti,
United States Agency for International Development (USAID),
and
the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) discussing
development opportunities and obstacles on the border;
3) I visited over 20 sugar cane communities where I interviewed
community leaders and conducted a more in depth interviews
in three sugar cane communities; 4) I conducted interviews
with recent Haitian immigrants in Santo Domingo who were
working in the informal sector; 5) I conducted interviews
in Haiti with men who have immigrated to the Dominican
Republic at one point in their lives and are currently
residing in Haiti.
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| Batey
Guasumita- Woman and her children standing in
front of their home built by the government to house
sugar cane cutters. |
Outcomes
Haitian
immigration was initiated by a bilateral agreement between
both governments to meet the labor demands
of the fast growing sugar in the Dominican Republic,
this creates unique historical situation from the beginning where work
was racialized and to this day over 90 percent of the sugar cane cutters
are Haitian or of Haitian decent. Currently, the new immigrants from
Haiti
come to the urban centers to work in construction and very few aspire
to work in sugar. There is a sharp distinction
from Haitians who live and
work in the sugar communities and the Haitians who are living in urban
centers. The sugar communities called bateys were formed by the sugar
mill owners, most which were owned by the state,
built barracks for the workers
and through time these barracks have evolved into communities varying
in size from 50-2000 permanent residents. There
are over 400 bateys in the
Dominican Republic. Haitians or Dominicans of Haitian decent who live
in the bateys have been living in the Dominican
Republic for many years ranging
from 10-50 years and many of the younger population were born in the
Dominican Republic. Most of the people in the bateys
are not legal residents or citizens
of the Dominican Republic. Although more than half the population was
born in the Dominican Republic, and the Dominican
Constitution states that anyone
born on Dominican soil is a citizen of the Dominican Republic, most
children who’s parents are Haitian or of Haitian decent are not given birth
certificates. The denial of citizenship and difficulty I obtaining residency
has impacted the Haitian population living in the bateys in a number
of ways: it restricts movement west of Santo Domingo due to military
check
points of all vehicles heading towards the capital; children are not
allowed to go to school after the fourth grade if they do not have birth
certificates;
they can not work in the formal sector, meaning earning a paycheck; they
can not buy property, open up a bank account, and they constantly live
in fear of deportation.
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| Batey
Belmejo- Laila and son standing in their door
way of another government constructed barracks for
sugar cane
workers. |
Haitians living in the urban centers by in
large are new immigrants to the Dominican Republic, most
of them have been living in the Dominican Republic for
10 years or less and still have strong ties to Haiti. Everyone
I interviewed who lives in Santo Domingo go back to Haiti
at least once a year and send remittances back on a regular
basis to their families with friends. All of the new immigrants
works or worked in the informal sector, primarily in construction
and selling food stuffs on the street and at stop lights.
The current administration and the immigration police and
the military have given particular attention to repatriating
Haitians in urban areas. In the past three years the deportation
process has been systematized. Prior to this administration
repatriation efforts were done sporadically resulting in
thousands of Haitians being deported in a short period
of time and then nothing for months or even years, but
now the repatriation efforts are done daily in many of
the neighborhoods with a large Haitian population and on
the street where many Haitians sell various products. The
repatriation process in the Dominican Republic is stopping
a Haitian or a person of Haitian decent often times with
documentation and putting them in jail without any notice
to family or friends, or the opportunity to gather ones
belongings, and when there is enough people to fill a bus
driving them to the border and dropping them off. A many
of the people who I interviewed in Haiti, who lived in
the Dominican Republic were deported and a number of people
I interviewed in Santo Domingo had also been deported and
returned to the Dominican Republic soon after. Deportation
concerns are more eminent in the urban centers than the
rural bateys.
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| San
Luis- In the foreground there is sugar that has
been out of production for about 6 years, the community
in the middle of the picture who used to depend on the
sugar harvest and the background is the sugar processing
plant. The government sugar estate Ozama is located approximately
45 km east of the Capital city of Santo Domingo. |
The
state owned sugar mills were privatized in 1999; and
as a result disruptions and large changes
occurred in many bateys. Problems in production, falling
sugar prices, and the lack of technology in the sugar
mills led to nearly all of the sugar mills shutting down
leaving
the communities which depended on the sugar mill as
their source of income in an economically and socially
desperate
situation. All of the land surrounding the communities
is now leased by private investors who have left the
land out of production without giving the people an option
to
buy or produce on the land, in addition, prior to privatization
the state provided some social services such as health
care to the communities which now are gone. The general
downturn of the Dominican economy, inflation, and the
recent embezzlement from the central bank has exacerbated
the
deplorable situation in the bateys. The resonating
complaints by the people living in the bateys was “no hay nada
aqui, ni para comer” – there is nothing here,
not even to eat- while there was significant international
attention and criticism by various organizations on the
mistreatment of Haitian sugar cane workers in the Dominican
Republic, the dilemma now is what do the people do when
they don’t even access to what the international
community called “slave labor?” Almost
everyone I interviewed in the bateys stated that things
were better
when there was sugar, although they conceded to the
fact that wages were low, the hours were too long,
and they
were cheated on a regular basis, it was better than
their current situation.
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| Market
in Ouanaminthe- a local market
in the Haitian city of Ouanaminthe. Most of the products
sold at the
market are imported from Dajabon, on the Dominican side
of the border which is located approximately 5 Km away
from this site. |
Like
most borders, the area in between the Dominican Republic
and Haiti is a unique place. The border is one of the most
impoverished areas in both countries. I spent five days
in the northwest border town of Dajabon at a conference
with NGO’s, international institutions, and Peace
Corps volunteers in a dialogue focused on the problems
and opportunities around the border area. On the border
both of the economies and the people are heavily tied.
There are large markets twice a week in Dajabon on the
Dominican side of the border, more than 20 million pesos
are exchanged every Friday and Monday, this figure does
not include the market in the Haitian city of Ouanaminthe,
and 25 millions pesos earned monthly just from Dominican
customs. While there is very little cooperation and sharing
of resources on both sides of the border, recently the
Dominican government has agreed to lend a flat bed truck
once a week to the city of Ouanaminthe to dump garbage.
The primary problems and opportunities identified during
the conference were although there are many development
opportunities which can and need to be done on both sides
such as watershed restoration, public health and reforestation
initiatives, there is a lack of financial support from
the governments and international institutions, as well
as a lack of political will on both sides of the border.
This was the cry that I heard not only on the border but
from the institutions based out of Santo Domingo as well.
Because there are few efforts to change the current immigrant
law as well as the lack if implementation of the already
existing laws, it is difficult to change the Haitian situation
in the Dominican Republic on the border, in urban centers,
and the bateys. All of the NGO executive directors, most
of whom have been working for the Haitian cause for more
than 10 years stated that year after year it is getting
more and more difficult due to the lack of funding and
political will. In a interview with Inoelia Remy, the executive
director of the Association for development of women and
the environment, stated candidly that the same people who
make and implement the laws are the ones who benefit from
low wage labor that Haitians provide, they are the ones
who are constructing homes, they are the ones who have
yards to be maintained, they are the ones who need maids
to cook and clean, and why would they ever choose to place
at risk the benefits they receive by keeping Haitians illegal
and thereby complacent and give Haitians rights in a country
where the economy has been built from the blood and sweat
of the very people who they deny. The Dominican Republic
the only country in Latin America and the Caribbean whose
independence was attained not from a colonial power rather
from neighbor, to this day cultural fears provoked by what
the Dominicans call “the silent invasion” by
Haitians remains today governing the policies and civil
society.
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| Cristo
Rey- a neighborhood (barrio) on the northern
edge of the National District where I was based out of.
On the fringe of the neighborhood there is a large produce
market where many migrants from the rural areas and Haitians
work selling agricultural products. |