Deportations Will Begin Today

AlterEgo

Administrator
Staff member
Jan 9, 2009
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South Coast
According to El Nacional, the deportation of illegals in DR has begun today: [computer translated]

Government begins to repatriate illegals

Posted on 24:31 by Teofilo Bonilla
e-mail: t.bonilla [@] elnacional.com.do

The early hours of Friday officially began, the repatriation of illegal immigrants, with a first group of 20 Haitians who failed to qualify for the National Reorganization Plan for Foreigners, said a source of full credit.
The returnees sent two groups of ten They were handed over to the Haitian authorities to Elias Pi?a and Dajabon, and minibuses that were sent to the border today left at 5:00 in the morning.

The irrefutable source said that "the measure are applying yesterday after the meeting led by President Danilo Medina, who instructed us to begin repatriations, but in groups of ten, do not mass or discriminatory".

This morning, Immigration inspectors and soldiers who were traveling in buses and trucks, performed operating in rural communities in the Eastern region and the provinces of Cibao, National District and Santo Domingo province, where they were detained immigrants had no documents to indicate that entered the regularization plan.

The informant pointed to National anonymity, and argued that the measure ordered the Head of State after a meeting yesterday at the National Palace, where were the defense minister, Lieutenant General William Mu?oz Delgado Maximum; the Director of Immigration, General Paulino Sem Dario; Army commander Dominican Republic (ERD), Major General Jose Eugenio Matos de la Cruz, and the director of the Specialized Border Security Corps (Cesfront), General Carlos Aguirre Reyes, among other officials.

"President Medina was repetitive to note that during repatriations no human rights violations to illegal aliens, non-discriminatory arrests, which are not massive and carried out in groups of 10 or 20 people do," he said.

The source said yesterday evening, immigration inspectors accompanied by military carried out operations in the eastern region of the country, and arrested dozens of illegal immigrants who were immediately taken to the vocational center of Haina and this morning were sent home.

Friday prior to the start of repatriation, the source told El Nacional that several meetings between the Minister of Defense, the Director of Immigration, the army commander and the director of Cesfront were made. Prior to the start today of repatriations, the Defense Ministry prepared two thousand soldiers to whom he taught in Creole, human rights, immigration intervention and five drills were held all along the Dominican-Haitian border.

"It interest of Mr. President, of the Dominican authorities, during the process of repatriation of human rights, which are not discriminatory or massive respect," said a source National full credit.

THE FACT
Braking

A government circle was informed that the repatriations were braking because they were in the hands of President Medina, who not had authorized hoping to conclude the congressional and municipal elections in Haiti, held last Sunday and whose results are still unknown.

http://elnacional.com.do/gobierno-comienza-a-repatriar-ilegales/
 

caribmike

Gold
Jul 9, 2009
6,808
202
63
Waiting for the outcry of the Haitian Smear Campaigners now... 3,2,1... Can't be long...
 

donP

Newbie
Dec 14, 2008
6,942
178
0
10 in a Minibus

In groups of ten...
How cute and neat. :)
Soon the deportees will queue up for a free weekend trip home... :bunny:

donP
 

ZC1

Member
Dec 8, 2013
179
6
18
According to El Nacional, the deportation of illegals in DR has begun today: [computer translated]

Government begins to repatriate illegals

Posted on 24:31 by Teofilo Bonilla
e-mail: t.bonilla [@] elnacional.com.do

The early hours of Friday officially began, the repatriation of illegal immigrants, with a first group of 20 Haitians who failed to qualify for the National Reorganization Plan for Foreigners, said a source of full credit.
The returnees sent two groups of ten They were handed over to the Haitian authorities to Elias Pi?a and Dajabon, and minibuses that were sent to the border today left at 5:00 in the morning.

The irrefutable source said that "the measure are applying yesterday after the meeting led by President Danilo Medina, who instructed us to begin repatriations, but in groups of ten, do not mass or discriminatory".

This morning, Immigration inspectors and soldiers who were traveling in buses and trucks, performed operating in rural communities in the Eastern region and the provinces of Cibao, National District and Santo Domingo province, where they were detained immigrants had no documents to indicate that entered the regularization plan.

The informant pointed to National anonymity, and argued that the measure ordered the Head of State after a meeting yesterday at the National Palace, where were the defense minister, Lieutenant General William Mu?oz Delgado Maximum; the Director of Immigration, General Paulino Sem Dario; Army commander Dominican Republic (ERD), Major General Jose Eugenio Matos de la Cruz, and the director of the Specialized Border Security Corps (Cesfront), General Carlos Aguirre Reyes, among other officials.

"President Medina was repetitive to note that during repatriations no human rights violations to illegal aliens, non-discriminatory arrests, which are not massive and carried out in groups of 10 or 20 people do," he said.

The source said yesterday evening, immigration inspectors accompanied by military carried out operations in the eastern region of the country, and arrested dozens of illegal immigrants who were immediately taken to the vocational center of Haina and this morning were sent home.

Friday prior to the start of repatriation, the source told El Nacional that several meetings between the Minister of Defense, the Director of Immigration, the army commander and the director of Cesfront were made. Prior to the start today of repatriations, the Defense Ministry prepared two thousand soldiers to whom he taught in Creole, human rights, immigration intervention and five drills were held all along the Dominican-Haitian border.

"It interest of Mr. President, of the Dominican authorities, during the process of repatriation of human rights, which are not discriminatory or massive respect," said a source National full credit.

THE FACT
Braking

A government circle was informed that the repatriations were braking because they were in the hands of President Medina, who not had authorized hoping to conclude the congressional and municipal elections in Haiti, held last Sunday and whose results are still unknown.

http://elnacional.com.do/gobierno-comienza-a-repatriar-ilegales/
T\\

The USA criticizes the DR for doing exactly what the USA should do with illegal immigrants. I applaud the DR for exercising sovereignty.
 

william webster

Platinum
Jan 16, 2009
30,247
4,329
113
It may get worse ......... and may never get better

this is the ugly part.... like the courtroom..........GUILTY !!
and then the shackles appear
 

NALs

Economist by Profession
Jan 20, 2003
13,368
3,150
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T\\

The USA criticizes the DR for doing exactly what the USA should do with illegal immigrants. I applaud the DR for exercising sovereignty.
Well, the USA hasn't criticized the DR over this (the US ambassador has even given his support to the the regularization and deportation plan, he even recognized that many international media outlets have been unfair with the DR), its certain groups within the USA that are doing all the crying and mud slinging.
 

MikeFisher

The Fisherman/Weather Mod
Feb 28, 2006
13,766
2,195
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Punta Cana/DR
www.mikefisher.fun
til now they run their "Plan" wisely, not something that been expected, but it looks that way, til now.
they start with small daily numbers of deportees, so Haiti can not BS-Talk about any human crisis due any Mass Deportations.
in small numbers of a few dozen or even hundreds per day, Haiti should be easily capable to manage such on their soil,
which anyways would not be something to be blamed on the DR.
they keep it low key but run it constantly, that way time will bring a clean up.
Still,
my point as always,
it is only worth to be done,
IF the border is secured enough to not let 100 illegals in per day while a few hundreds only get deported, lol.

Mike
 

ramesses

Gold
Jun 17, 2005
6,672
809
113
PICHARDO said

Enforcement coming in days...

Like I said, it will be a system where unless you are legally here in the DR, things will be very hard for you.

When the first deportations start, the international and Haitian press will be dismayed to see non-Haitian foreigners being the first ones out the door! Mostly white, blondes, blue eyed, caucasians...

The when the first arrest is to take place of a Haitian, it WILL BE video taped and with all the required Laws followed to the "T".

Same for the deportation process. Anybody claiming to be under ANY type of legal recourse to stop the deportation will be allowed to use it. The database is fully prepared to be challenged.
 

ju10prd

On Vacation!
Nov 19, 2014
4,210
0
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Accountkiller
Formal statement by USA
PRESS RELEASE

Dominican Republic: Start of deportations

Washington.– The United States is aware of the decision by the Dominican Republic to begin deporting persons who are deemed illegally present in the country. We recognize the prerogative of the Dominican Republic to remove individuals from its territory who are present without authorization.


At the same time, we urge the Dominican Republic to avoid mass deportations and to conduct any deportations in a transparent manner that fully respects the human rights of deportees. Deportation procedures must adhere to clear, publicly available and verifiable protocols and procedures. Dominican nationality and migration policies and practices should be consistent with Dominican law and the Dominican Republic’s international obligations and commitments.

We urge the Government of the Dominican Republic to permit the observation of deportation proceedings by civil society groups and international organizations, such as the International Organization for Migration and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, including at the borders.


We remain deeply concerned that individuals with a right to citizenship or otherwise eligible to remain in the Dominican Republic may not have had sufficient time and means to access the processes to regulate and formalize their status and have their claims adjudicated.


Therefore, it is imperative that the Dominican Republic effectively screen people potentially subject to deportation to determine if they are Dominican citizens, require international protection, or are eligible for naturalization or regularization. In all cases, the Dominican Republic should take measures adequate to prevent the risk of statelessness and the discriminatory confiscation of documents.

We encourage the Dominican Republic and Haiti to consult and collaborate with each other to develop effective processes and procedures for the safe and orderly return of migrants across their shared border. These processes should be consistent with each country’s international obligations and commitments, uphold the rule of law, provide procedural safeguards to guarantee appropriate treatment of deportees, and facilitate the immediate return of individuals deported from the Dominican Republic who have a right of citizenship or presence in the country.

The United States will continue to actively monitor developments in the Dominican Republic, and engage the Government of the Dominican Republic to ensure the protection of human rights, encourage social inclusion of all people, and work to prevent the arbitrary deprivation of nationality for legal citizens.



Press Statement
Mark C. Toner
Deputy Department Spokesperson
Washington, DC
August 14, 2015
 

bob saunders

Platinum
Jan 1, 2002
32,503
5,932
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dr1.com
Formal statement by USA
PRESS RELEASE

Dominican Republic: Start of deportations

Washington.– The United States is aware of the decision by the Dominican Republic to begin deporting persons who are deemed illegally present in the country. We recognize the prerogative of the Dominican Republic to remove individuals from its territory who are present without authorization.


At the same time, we urge the Dominican Republic to avoid mass deportations and to conduct any deportations in a transparent manner that fully respects the human rights of deportees. Deportation procedures must adhere to clear, publicly available and verifiable protocols and procedures. Dominican nationality and migration policies and practices should be consistent with Dominican law and the Dominican Republic’s international obligations and commitments.

We urge the Government of the Dominican Republic to permit the observation of deportation proceedings by civil society groups and international organizations, such as the International Organization for Migration and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, including at the borders.


We remain deeply concerned that individuals with a right to citizenship or otherwise eligible to remain in the Dominican Republic may not have had sufficient time and means to access the processes to regulate and formalize their status and have their claims adjudicated.


Therefore, it is imperative that the Dominican Republic effectively screen people potentially subject to deportation to determine if they are Dominican citizens, require international protection, or are eligible for naturalization or regularization. In all cases, the Dominican Republic should take measures adequate to prevent the risk of statelessness and the discriminatory confiscation of documents.

We encourage the Dominican Republic and Haiti to consult and collaborate with each other to develop effective processes and procedures for the safe and orderly return of migrants across their shared border. These processes should be consistent with each country’s international obligations and commitments, uphold the rule of law, provide procedural safeguards to guarantee appropriate treatment of deportees, and facilitate the immediate return of individuals deported from the Dominican Republic who have a right of citizenship or presence in the country.

The United States will continue to actively monitor developments in the Dominican Republic, and engage the Government of the Dominican Republic to ensure the protection of human rights, encourage social inclusion of all people, and work to prevent the arbitrary deprivation of nationality for legal citizens.



Press Statement
Mark C. Toner
Deputy Department Spokesperson
Washington, DC
August 14, 2015

I think the USA should be conserned about their own procedures and processes that don't follow international law.