Cast out of U.S., Haiti migrant drops American Dream for second go in
Chile
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[December 13, 2021]
By Gessika Thomas, Ivan Alvarado and Daina Beth Solomon
PORT-AU-PRINCE/PEUMO, Chile (Reuters) -
Like thousands of other Haitian migrants, Eric Jean Louis gave up his
house and job in Chile earlier this year to trek thousands of miles to
the United States after hearing he could receive asylum under President
Joe Biden's new administration.
His hopes were dashed when U.S. officials at Del Rio, Texas in September
returned him to Haiti - a place he left 14 years ago and said had since
become unrecognizable, ripped apart by gang violence.
After six weeks that felt like "going back to hell," the 47-year-old
scraped together money from friends for plane tickets to Chile, ready to
give the country another try - even if it meant starting again in a
place where Jean Louis said life was not easy and Haitians sometimes
faced racism.
But it still beat home.
"Since I've been here, I hardly sleep at night. I'm afraid," Jean Louis
said in Port-au-Prince, shortly before he left for Chile with his wife
and four relatives in November.
Jean Louis' family and others with money and the right visas are part of
a new migration triangle, returning to places in the Southern Cone they
had just left, and abandoning, for now, their American Dream.
As rumors grew among Haitian communities in Chile and Brazil that
Haitians were being allowed to cross the U.S.-Mexico border to claim
asylum, an encampment under the Del Rio International Bridge swelled to
14,000 people in September wanting to enter the United States. It became
a symbol of Biden's struggle to curb record numbers of migrants at the
border.
Close to 8,000 Haitians were eventually expelled from Del Rio to Haiti,
U.S. officials say. Nearly all had previously lived in Chile or Brazil,
countries that in the last decade have taken in tens of thousands of
people fleeing poverty in Haiti.
Dozens of those expelled have since returned to Chile or Brazil,
estimated Giuseppe Loprete, Chief of Mission for the International
Organization for Migration in Haiti.
Those numbers are likely to increase - but slowly, given the challenge
of arranging migration paperwork and finding thousands of dollars for
entire families to travel.
"They lost the little they had, and now they're back to square one,"
Loprete said.
At Port-au-Prince's Toussaint Louverture Airport last month, a Reuters
reporter spoke to three Del Rio deportees, some with their families, who
were flying to Chile and Brazil.
All said they hoped never to return to Haiti due to worsening violence
and political turmoil.
Since President Jovenel Moise's assassination in July, Haiti's gangs
have extended their influence, fueling kidnappings that target locals as
well as foreigners, including American and Canadian missionaries in
October.
Migrant advocacy groups and a Biden appointee blasted the U.S. decision
to return people to Haiti during such chaos.
Jean Louis' time back in Haiti coincided with a month-long gang blockade
of fuel supplies that created crippling gasoline shortages and prevented
him from seeing relatives. Fear of gangs often left him too scared to
even leave his house, he said.
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'NOTHING HERE'
Juvenson Sudney, 25, left Haiti in 2015 for Brazil. In July this
year, hoping to escape economic malaise in South America and join an
uncle in Florida, he set off on the 5,200 mile (8,400 km) journey to
the United States.
He got as far as Del Rio - and then was put on a plane to Haiti.
The upheaval in Haiti pushed him to return to Brazil, where he is a
naturalized citizen.
"There's nothing here for me," he said at the Port-au-Prince
airport.
Other Haitians have found going back to South America tricky. Four
people expelled from Del Rio told Reuters they were struggling to
pay for plane tickets and get visas in order.
Some left Chile while awaiting visa renewals, and must now contend
with tougher visa rules from 2018. Chile's migration office did not
respond to a request for comment.
Brazil's foreign ministry said it could "facilitate" the return to
Brazil of families where the children were born in Brazil, and that
foreigners with Brazilian spouses can obtain entry visas. Others
would be handled case by case, the ministry said.
Joao Chaves, a Brazilian federal public defender who works with
migrants, said he was helping two families with Brazilian-born
children - who were also sent to Haiti from Del Rio - request plane
tickets from Brazil's government for the return trip.
Migrant advocates say visa applications for Haitians in Chile and
Brazil are backed up, partly because of the pandemic.
Jean Louis, who has a permanent residency visa in Chile, said he
spent $8,000 traversing Central America and Mexico to reach Del Rio,
draining his savings. Friends helped him and his wife buy tickets to
Chile for about $710 each.
Once he and his family landed in Santiago, they were held at the
airport six hours for COVID-19 tests and paperwork.
"I prayed to God they would let us enter Chile, it was my only
hope," he said.
Back in his former town of Peumo, in Chile's wine-growing region a
couple of hours drive south of Santiago, he told friends how Haiti
had changed.
His boss welcomed him back to his janitor position, but Jean Louis
declined, opting for a factory job. He also turned down offers from
friends to return belongings he had given away.
"I want to start over again," he said.
Though relieved to be back in Chile, remorse gnaws at him.
"Everyone knows I took this trip of misfortune," he said. "And that
I failed."
(Reporting by Gessika Thomas in Port-Au-Prince, Daina Beth Solomon
in Mexico City and Ivan Alvarado in Peumo, Chile; Additional
reporting by Brian Ellsworth in Miami and Gabriel Stargardter in Rio
de Janeiro; Editing by Dave Graham and Rosalba O'Brien)
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