Unauthorized Haitians build the Dominican Republic. Can they stay?
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| Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Vanel Rozier loads heavy sacks of gravel into the back of a waiting truck, his body moving in time with the Haitian kompa music playing from a co-worker鈥檚 phone. The air smells of sweat, dust, and roasted peanuts wafting from a nearby vendor.
Though deep in his work, Mr. Rozier聽is alert to his surroundings here in the heart of Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic. If the police show up, he knows the drill: Drop the sack, grab his backpack, and run.
鈥淲e鈥檝e all done it,鈥 he says, nodding at a handful of young men behind him shoveling gravel into large plastic sacks and passing them along. They all come from neighboring Haiti, which shares a border with the Dominican Republic on the island of Hispaniola. In this bustling corner of the city, they work from sunrise to sunset, seven days a week, without legal status.
Why We Wrote This
The Dominican Republic is deporting record numbers of Haitians, forcing them to endure catastrophic security, economic, and humanitarian crises at home. Can new, economically powerful Dominican voices shift the conversation?
An estimated half a million Haitians live in the Dominican Republic, seeking the stable life denied them at home, where armed gangs control most of the Haitian capital, state institutions have collapsed, poverty has deepened, and repeated natural disasters have left hundreds of thousands homeless.
Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader has made deportation of Haitians the centerpiece of his government policy, with an ambitious target 鈥 10,000 deportations a week. Haitians and Dominicans of Haitian descent have been detained at hospitals while preparing for birth, while coming home from school, and for simply 鈥渓ooking Haitian.鈥 In late June, the U.S. government announced it would end temporary protected status for Haitians in September, a move that is expected to increase deportations of Haitians from the United States as well.
More than 119,000 Haitians were expelled from the聽Dominican Republic between January and May. That marked a 71% increase over the same period last year, even if below the official target.
But for those who work with Haitians every day and depend on their labor, there鈥檚 a need for increased education here about Haitians鈥 vital role in society. The construction sector 鈥 Dominican Republic鈥檚 second-largest industry 鈥 is beginning to speak out, calling for visa programs or work authorization, as industry leaders say the workforce is predominantly made up of Haitian workers.
鈥淲ithout Haitian labor, construction stops,鈥 says Eliseo Cristopher, president of Copymecon, a Dominican confederation of small- and medium-sized construction enterprises.
He says companies are 鈥渧ery worried鈥 about losing their workforce amid the mass deportations. 鈥淒ominicans are not interested in doing that kind of work,鈥 he says of hauling cement and breaking ground under the tropical sun. Those in the construction sector estimate 80% of workers are Haitian.
鈥淚 do think it makes a difference鈥 that employers are speaking up, says Bridget Wooding, a leading migration researcher and director of the Caribbean Migration and Development Observatory (OBMICA), based in Santo Domingo.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just industry leaders 鈥 even the Agriculture Ministry has been speaking out. The president may use his economic and social dialogue to quietly shift course without losing face.鈥
鈥淧romising change,鈥 upping deportations
The focus on deportations from the Dominican Republic today has more to do with domestic politics than with Haitians, says Dr. Wooding.
鈥淩ight now, it鈥檚 the rising cost of living, and corruption,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his government came to power promising change 鈥 but it hasn鈥檛 convinced people that real reform is happening.鈥
Deportations are popular among voters. Some 89.2% of Dominicans聽鈥 government supporters and opponents聽鈥 approve of the policy, according to a recent poll.
Over the past year, the government has manned the Haitian border with 11,000 soldiers. Beginning in April, immigration agents, sometimes backed by the military, have conducted sweeps on buses, in markets, and around construction sites.
Mr. Rozier fled Les Cayes, in southern Haiti, after a 2021 earthquake devastated his city. His $60 a week wage as a manual laborer allows him to support his mother, father, sister, and brother 鈥 all of whom followed him across the border.
He has been caught up in sweeps and detained three times, he says, always on his way home from work. Each time, he secured his release by paying bribes to the police.
鈥淗alf a month鈥檚 wages,鈥 he says of the price he has paid for his freedom.
Identity, sovereignty, and being 鈥減ro-Haitian鈥
Dominican officials insist their deportations comply with human rights standards. Amnesty International and the United Nations have called them discriminatory and in violation of international law. Haiti鈥檚 interim government compared them to 鈥渆thnic cleansing鈥 at an emergency Organization of American States meeting last year.
Mr. Cristopher, the leader of a construction professional association, attracted fierce criticism for publicly demanding talks with the government about regularizing undocumented workers, 鈥渨ith access to social security and other protections of formal employment,鈥 he says.
鈥淧eople accuse me of being 鈥榩ro-Haitian,鈥欌 he says. His phone 鈥渆xploded with angry messages鈥 after he voiced his position on a news program earlier this year.
鈥淏eing 鈥榩ro-Haitian鈥 is a term for being unpatriotic, a betrayal of the homeland,鈥 says Dominican human rights activist Elena Lorac, who believes more businesses should follow Mr. Cristopher鈥檚 example.
鈥淢igration control is framed as protecting sovereignty,鈥 she says, an approach that dates back to the Dominican Republic鈥檚 declaration of independence from Haiti in 1844.
Ever since, authorities have emphasized racial, cultural, and linguistic differences between Dominicans and Haitians, she says. 鈥淭he government has spread this language [of betrayal] so widely that Haitians now live in fear of being reported by neighbors, fellow churchgoers, even teachers.鈥
Breaking down barriers
Still, where Dominicans and Haitians work side by side, sympathy and solidarity build ties.
Early every morning, before raids begin, Tom谩s Pe帽a, who supervises a medium-sized construction company in Santo Domingo, picks up his Haitian colleagues in a van with tinted windows. He tries to make sure work assignments aren鈥檛 in busy, public areas.
鈥淭he only hours of the day I feel safe are when I鈥檓 working,鈥 says one worker, a former engineering student from Haiti, who asks not to be named for his security.
He first arrived in Santo Domingo five years ago with a dream of finishing his studies. Gangs had stormed and shuttered his university in Port-au-Prince. But, unable to obtain a visa here, he was deported 鈥 several times.
When he finally made it back to Santo Domingo last December, Mr. Pe帽a offered him a job.
For Mr. Pe帽a, it鈥檚 about more than protecting good employees 鈥 it鈥檚 about being a good friend. Many Dominican employers have limited contact with their Haitian workers, he says, often because they鈥檙e on different ends of the labor spectrum.
鈥淏ut my co-worker here for instance,鈥 he says of the young engineer, 鈥渨e work side by side. We talk every day,鈥 which has shifted his perspective.
Mr. Pe帽a laughs, embarrassed, recalling how he once repeated the same 鈥渂ad things about Haiti and Haitians as everyone else. All I knew was what I saw on the news: poverty, crime, problems.鈥
Now he dreams of visiting Haiti one day.
As fear and distrust tighten their grip on the Haitian diaspora, Mr. Pe帽a鈥檚 friendship has served as a reminder to some of his co-workers that there are Dominicans standing by them.
Sometimes, the young engineer from Haiti says, his uncertainty about when he might be detained becomes so overwhelming that he contemplates returning to Haiti on his own. In those moments, Mr. Pe帽a reassures him.
鈥淪tay with us,鈥 Mr. Pe帽a tells him. 鈥淲e want you here.鈥