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HAITIANS DISPLACED BY POLITICAL
REPRISALS
August 6, 2004 - (Refugees International) Political
violence and a culture of reprisals have forced the internal displacement
of politically active members of Haitian society. Haitians fleeing
persecution must hide in their own country because the U.S. and
the Dominican Republic are making it difficult for them to receive
asylum, or even protection.
On a recent mission to Haiti Refugees International
spoke with journalists, elected local council members and a former
mayor, all of whom had family members who were slain in retaliation
for their political affiliations. One woman in Port-au-Prince said
that her husband, who had been mayor of a provincial town, was assassinated.
I have six children to feed and am unemployed, she said.
I have no family in Port-au-Prince, but I cannot live in my
town. We are all potential targets of violence. I move from house-to-house
and depend on the charity of strangers. She could not file
a complaint with the police or receive compensation through the
courts, because her husbands attackers were linked to the
police. She has sought the support of a local human rights organization
in Port-au-Prince to pursue justice and hopefully find economic
support.
Another man, who had held a high political post
in a provincial department, showed RI pictures of slain family members.
He said a group of former army officers had gone to his home. When
they did not find him, they killed three of his family members,
including children. I fled to Port-au-Prince, but I am still
afraid. I am sure that they are still looking for me. I dont
travel freely, and also move house-to-house. There are at least
another 20 people like me from my town of Belladere, who face similar
violence.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares
that everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other
countries asylum from persecution, yet the U.S. is working
hard to block refugees and asylum seekers. In February, with violence
rising in Haiti and the government collapsing, President Bush said,
We will turn back any refugee that attempts to reach our shore,
and that message needs to be very clear as well to the Haitian people.
U.S. Coast Guard vessels intercept Haitian boats headed to Florida.
Haitians whom U.S. immigration authorities believe have a credible
fear of persecution and have not yet reached the United States are
held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, pending resettlement in another country.
Many Haitians who have reached the U. S. are detained without bond
and in some cases held for up to two years at the Krome Processing
Center in Miami. The vast majority of almost 2,000 Haitians who
were interdicted at sea in the first quarter of the year were returned
summarily to Haitian ports with little or no support from local
authorities.
The Dominican Republic also closed its border with
Haiti during the violence in February and March, despite obligations
under the U.N. Refugee Convention and admonishments from the U.N.
refugee organization, UNHCR. Military from the Dominican Republic
set up camps for those fleeing violence on the Haitian side of the
border in an effort to ensure that Haitians refugees did not enter
the country.
Paradoxically the Dominican border reopened within
several weeks to allow for an informal and unregulated free trade
between both countries. Each Monday and Friday the border at Ounamenthe,
Haiti, and Djabon, Dominican Republic, opens for trade, ensuring
easy access to informal labor for the Dominican Republic, and Haitian
access to cheaper imports. An estimated 800,000 economic migrants
from Haiti work primarily in agriculture and as domestic help in
the Dominican Republic, where they have no legal rights. Of these
up to 20,000 unaccompanied children are unwittingly trafficked into
the country to be used as labor in violation of the International
Convention on the Rights of the Child. They often have no means
of returning to family members in Haiti. An unknown number of women
are trafficked annually into prostitution.
The open border does allow easy access to the country
for Haitians fleeing ongoing political violence, but only 700 Haitians
have been able to apply successfully for asylum in the Dominican
Republic. Of these, all of whom arrived in the past three years,
not a single one has been fully processed or granted the right to
asylum. Although there is a formal asylum procedure in place, established
in part with UNHCR help, it does not function. The responsible body,
CONAVI has never convened to decide a case. As a result Haitian
asylum seekers have very few legal entitlements in the Dominican
Republic. They are not permitted to work, and their children of
secondary school age are prohibited from attending classes. They
are not even free from deportation. Recently a 15 year old Haitian
asylum seeker was deported after being detained by police a few
blocks from her home. The police did not contact the girls
family, and there is currently no trace of her in Haiti. There is
simply a record of her having been deported to the border by the
Dominican authorities.
Refugees International deplores the current conditions
for internally displaced Haitians and asylum seekers and recommends
that:
* The Haitian government act with all deliberate speed to ensure
political freedoms, and to guarantee the safety of its citizens.
* The U.S. grant temporary protective status to all Haitian asylum
seekers as long as political turmoil continues. Haitian asylum seekers
should not be subject to detention proceedings, which treat them
as criminals instead of as victims deserving a fair and just determination
of their legal status.
* The Dominican Republic comply with its existing law and ensure
that CONAVI start proceedings to normalize the status of Haitian
asylum seekers, who should also enjoy the basic rights of education
and to seek employment.
* The U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights thoroughly
study the issue of internal displacement in Haiti, and ensure that
displaced families receive adequate protection
From: http://www.newshaiti.com/index.php?mode=single&n=582
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