Dominican lawmakers denounce Vatican News report on Haitian migrants

windeguy

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Santo Domingo.- Lawmakers from multiple political parties in the Dominican Republic have strongly rejected an article published by Vatican News, the official media outlet of the Holy See, which accuses the country of committing “barbaric acts” against Haitian migrants.

The legislators called on the Dominican Foreign Ministry to request a formal explanation from both the Vatican and the Dominican Episcopal Conference. They expressed concern over the article’s serious allegations, which they believe misrepresent the country’s immigration policies and practices.

The Vatican News article claims that Dominican authorities have intensified immigration controls, allegedly forcing pregnant Haitian women to give birth at home, and accuses officials of torturing detainees, denying them food and water, and allowing deaths to occur in detention centers.
 

windeguy

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Religious institutions call for end to harassment of Haitians in Dominican Republic​

Over a hundred religious and social organisations from around the globe publicly denounce the “illegal and unjust treatment” of people of Haitian descent in the neighbouring Dominican Republic.

By Sr. Francine-Marie Cooper
In a joint statement, 127 religious and social organisations from the Spanish-speaking world have condemned the practices of the military and agents of the General Directorate of Migration (DGM) in the Dominican Republic.
According to the press release, Dominican authorities have used their position “to commit crimes against the physical integrity and wellbeing of the people they are supposed to protect.”
The statement speaks of a particular event, which took place on the night of Friday, March 15. The authorities allegedly “engaged in illegal and unjust practices against innocent families in Villa Guerrero, the community of Santa Lucia, and the township of Santa Cruz de El Seibo, in order to carry out supposed deportations of Haitians.”

Illegal deportations​

The religious and social organisations especially denounced the severe traumatisation of children and pregnant women whom they say were kidnapped for the purpose of “deportation”.
They also condemned the “theft of money, mobile phones and other goods from the affected families, disguised as deportations by DGM and military agents.”
The Dominican authorities are also alleged to have used verbal and physical violence against these families, and to have harassed “persons with Dominican documentation and documentation accrediting their regular residence in the Dominican Republic.”

Violation of the country’s constitution​

According to the statement, these practices are not in accordance with the constitution of the Dominican Republic.
The constitution promises in Article 39, that “for the Dominican State, all individuals are equal before the law and must receive the same protection and treatment for this reason, as they enjoy the same rights.”
It further specifies that “rights are enjoyed without any discrimination, ‘for reasons of gender, colour, age, disability, nationality, family ties, language, religion, political or philosophical opinion, social or personal condition.’ Among these rights is the right to due process (Art. 69) and not to be deprived of liberty arbitrarily or unreasonably (Art. 71).”
The statement lamented that the constitution has been violated by the Dominican Institutions and demanded “that the Dominican authorities put an immediate end to these practices that violate human rights and that they guarantee transparent and fair administrative processes for all people.”
The international organisations called on Dominican President Luis Abinader “to order an end to these practices often aimed at extortion and theft.”
At the UN General Assembly in September 2023, President Abinader spoke of the need to stand together and help each other, saying, “Either we fight together to save Haiti, or we will fight alone to protect the Dominican Republic.”
The joint statement of the 127 religious organisations pointed out “that this event, which took place in the early hours of Friday morning, was not aimed at ‘saving Haiti’, but neither was it aimed at ‘protecting the Dominican Republic’.”
The organisations furthermore invited the international community to help protect the rights of “these people, the weakest in Dominican society.”
 

windeguy

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Haitian Hunting:


It is a real Haitian hunt. They capture them anywhere: in the street, at work, in hospitals, in their homes, "he says."And it doesn't matter if they are adults or children, they take them and load them into trucks. "

In response to the report, the Dominican Republic Ambassador Before the Holy See of the State of the Vatican, Víctor Suárez, said Sunday that the country is acting "according to current laws and our Constitution."

"No state of the world has helped, it is helping and will continue to help Haiti more than our country,"said the ambassador to his X account.

He added: "If the great powers contribute to Haiti 10% of the efforts and contributions it makes, the story was another. Let's leave the pressure and we all go, unified to leave the words and act accordingly."
Ambassador had a nice way of telling the Vatican to go piss up a rope. Good for him.
 

livio

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Dec 13, 2007
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The Vatican, with its centuries old art collection and more gold than Fort Knox,
could finally put those dusty treasures to work! Just invite Haitian immigrants in
by the thousands, set up a little souvenir stand next to the Sistine Chapel,
and sell off a Michelangelo or two. Surely, nothing says charity like monetizing
masterpieces to fix global inequality one auction at a time.