Haitian migrants share harrowing stories of abuse as Dominican Republic
ramps up deportations
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[February 11, 2025]
By DÁNICA COTO
BELLADERE, Haiti (AP) — A crowd of 500 descended from dusty trucks on a
recent morning and shuffled through a tiny gap in a border gate
separating Haiti from the Dominican Republic.
They were the first deportees of the day, some still clad in work
clothes and others barefoot as they lined up for food, water and medical
care in the Haitian border city of Belladčre before mulling their next
move.
Under a broiling sun, the migrants recounted what they said were
mounting abuses by Dominican officials after President Luis Abinader
ordered them in October to start deporting at least 10,000 immigrants a
week under a harsh new policy widely criticized by civil organizations.
“They broke down my door at 4 in the morning,” said Odelyn St. Fleur,
who had worked as a mason in the Dominican Republic for two decades. He
had been sleeping next to his wife and 7-year-old son.
The number of alleged human rights violations ranging from unauthorized
home raids to racial profiling to deporting breastfeeding mothers and
unaccompanied minors is surging as officials ramp up deportations to
Haiti, which shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican
Republic.
More than a quarter million people were deported last year, and more
than 31,200 in January alone.
“The situation has reached a critical point,” said Roudy Joseph, an
activist who accused officials of ignoring due process during arrests.
“Every day, children are left abandoned at schools.”
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‘I’ll wait for you on the other side'
On a recent afternoon, dozens of vendors lined up on either side of the
men, women and unaccompanied children who marched single file into
Belladčre after being deported, their feet sinking into a muddy,
garbage-strewn trail that smelled of urine.
The men tried to sell them jeans, water, SIM cards and illegal trips
back to the Dominican Republic: “Would you like to pass through? I’ll
wait for you on the other side,” they whispered in Creole.
Despite the crackdown, many re-enter the Dominican Republic, exposing a
broken system.
That afternoon marked the second time Jimmy Milien, a 32-year-old floor
installer, was deported. He was arrested in the capital, Santo Domingo,
in 2024 and again in mid-January when authorities boarded a public bus
and pointed at him.
“Damn devil Haitian, get off,” he recalled them saying before they even
asked for documents.
He left behind his wife and two children, ages 3 and 12, and doesn’t
know when he’ll see them again.
He was planning to travel to Haiti's capital, but like thousands of
others dropped off in Belladčre, he would have to cross through gang
territory where gunmen open fire on public transport.
“There’s no food, there’s nothing, only criminals,” he said of Haiti,
where more than 5,600 people were reported killed last year, the
majority by gangs that control 85% of the capital, Port-au-Prince.
If Milien were to return a third time to the Dominican Republic, dozens
of smugglers await.
Mack, a Haitian who only gave his first name to speak freely about
smuggling, said he ferries migrants across the border up to six times a
week.
He charges $3 per person, and then offers $8 to Dominican border guards:
“If you pay them, they will let you through," he said.
He lived almost three years in Santo Domingo, installing drywall until
he got deported. He then joined a thriving smuggling operation and said
he doesn’t plan on returning to the capital until the crackdown eases.
“Here, everyone knows me,” he said. “They don’t bother me.”
Young and alone at the border
Military checkpoints dot the road leading out of the dusty border to the
Dominican capital. Authorities board buses, stick their heads into car
windows and detain suspected undocumented migrants, but many jump out
before a checkpoint and hop on again further down the road.
The influx of Haitian migrants and their attempts to re-enter illegally
is something that vexes Vice Admiral Luis Rafael Lee Ballester,
Dominican migration director.
“The Dominican Republic…has taken too much responsibility for the
situation in Haiti," he said. "We are willing to provide support, but
it’s important that Haiti’s leaders instill order in their country, that
they look after their people.”
Dominican officials argue that Haitian immigrants have overburdened the
country's public services, with more than 80,000 new Haitian students
enrolled in public schools in the past four years. Health officials say
Haitian women account for up to 70% of births in the country, costing
the government millions of dollars.
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Haitians deported from the Dominican Republic get out of trucks in
Carrizal, Dominican Republic, on the border with Haiti, Thursday,
Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Martin Adames)
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Ballester said he will deploy additional migration officials across
the country to tackle what he described as a surge in undocumented
immigrants, saying they’re a burden and a danger to his country.
While he denied abuse allegations, he acknowledged officials are
allowed to enter homes “during a hot pursuit” and that personnel are
being retrained “because our commitment to respecting human rights
is unquestionable.”
Ballester said the Dominican Republic does not deport unaccompanied
minors and that officials now separate women and children from men
during deportations.
But in late January, five teenagers without their parents were
deported. Among them was Jovenson Morette, 15, who said he was
detained while working in a field.
He and the four others were interviewed by Haitian officials in
Belladčre who were trying to track down their parents.
Further north, in the Haitian border town of Ouanaminthe, a
10-year-old unaccompanied girl was deported in late January, said
Geeta Narayan, UNICEF’s representative in Haiti.
“These children are amongst the most vulnerable,” she said, noting
that gangs along the border prey on them.
Last year, the Dominican Republic deported 1,099 unaccompanied
children; 786 of them were reunited with their families, according
to UNICEF.
Josette Jean, 45, feared for her 16-year-old son, who was born in
the Dominican Republic, when he was recently deported alone to
Haiti.
Clutching a picture of him, she said she rushed to the Dominican
detention center where he was being held but was told the government
doesn’t deport unaccompanied minors. He was deported anyway.
Jean paid a smuggler to bring her son back to the Dominican Republic
days later.
“Children who are born here have no idea where to go,” she said of
those deported to Haiti, a country her son had never visited.
A significant number of those deported, like Jean’s son, were born
in the Dominican Republic but lack birth certificates or other
official documentation proving their legal status, with activists
accusing the government of allowing work permits to expire or
refusing to process their paperwork. The Dominican Republic does not
automatically bestow citizenship to everyone born there.
As mass deportations continue, Dominican employers in the
agriculture and construction industries are complaining.
Ballester’s response? Hire Dominican workers.
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‘Haiti is drowning’
At least one cell phone was recording when Mikelson Germain, 25,
tried to evade Dominican authorities late last year. He was running
on a roof when an official caught him and pushed him off it. The
woman recording shrieked and started crying, thinking he was dead.
“By the grace of god, I fell on an electrical wire first,” Germain
said in a video taped by a nonprofit organization.
With his leg injured and his cousin’s children holding on to him,
Germain said authorities left the scene.
Activists accused the official of attempted murder, but despite the
widespread outcry, they say abuses persist.
Last year, a group of Dominican men, outraged at what they said was
the treatment and arrests of their Haitian neighbors, threw rocks,
bottles and other objects at authorities. One man tried to disarm a
migration official before shots were fired and everyone scattered.
As mass deportations continue, President Abinader warned Haiti's
situation is a danger to the region and that there could be an
“uncontrollable wave of migration” as he called for more support for
a U.N.-backed mission in Haiti struggling to fight gangs.
“There is no Dominican solution to the Haitian crisis,” he said.
“Haiti is drowning while an important part of the international
community watches passively from the shore.”
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Associated Press reporter Martín Adames Alcántara in Santo Domingo,
Dominican Republic, contributed.
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