SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican
Republic
The Dominican Republic announced Wednesday that it would start massive deportations of Haitians living illegally in the country, expelling up to 10,000 of them a week.
Government spokesman Homero
Figueroa told reporters that the government took the decision after noticing an
“excess” of Haitian migrants in the Dominican Republic, which shares the island
of Hispaniola with Haiti.
Figueroa said officials have
seen an increase in Haitian migrants as a U.N.-backed
mission in Haiti to fight gang violence flounders. He said authorities
also agreed to strengthen border surveillance and control, but he did not
provide details.
Last year, the Dominican
Republic deported more than 174,000 people it says are Haitians, and in the
first half of the year, it has expelled at least 67,000 more.
Activists have long criticized
the administration of President
Luis Abinader for what they say are ongoing human rights violations of
Haitians and those of Haitian descent born in the Dominican Republic. Abinader
has denied any mistreatment.
Wednesday’s announcement comes
a week after Abinader announced
at the U.N. General Assembly that he would take “drastic measures” if
the mission in Haiti fails. It is led by nearly 400 police officers from Kenya,
backed by nearly two dozen police and soldiers from Jamaica and two senior
military officers from Belize. The U.S. has warned that the mission lacks
personnel and funding as
it pushes for a U.N. peacekeeping mission instead.
Gangs in Haiti control 80% of
the Port-au-Prince capital, and the violence has left nearly 700,000
Haitians homeless in
recent years, while thousands of others have fled the country.
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