Current:Home > InvestHaiti’s crisis rises to the forefront of elections in neighboring Dominican Republic -Trailblazer Capital Learning
Haiti’s crisis rises to the forefront of elections in neighboring Dominican Republic
View
Date:2025-04-13 01:34:35
VERON, Dominican Republic (AP) — As soaring violence and political turmoil grip neighboring Haiti, the Dominican Republic will hold elections Sunday that have been defined by calls for more crackdowns on migrants and finishing a border wall dividing the countries.
Politics in the two Caribbean nations sharing the island of Hispaniola have long been intertwined. Haiti’s spiral into chaos in recent years has coincided with a harsh crackdown by its Dominican neighbor.
President Luis Abinader, a clear frontrunner race as he seeks reelection in the presidential race, has begun to build a Trump-like border wall along Haiti’s border and carried out mass deportations of 175,000 Haitians just last year. Dominicans also will be choosing members of Congress.
“We will continue to deport everyone who is illegal from any country,” Abinader said in a debate in late April. “A society that doesn’t do that is chaos and anarchy.”
Abinader, who has also pledged to strengthen the nation’s economy, said he would finish construction of the border wall with Haiti. His closest competitors – former President Leonel Fernández and Santiago Mayor Abel Martínez – have echoed his calls to ramp up the actions against migration.
The crackdown has marked an intensification of longtime policies by the Dominican government that human rights groups have alleged are discriminatory and put vulnerable people at risk.
Fernández, of the People’s Force party, said Dominicans were “afraid to go out into the streets” despite Abinader’s policies. He also said he would continue crackdowns while respecting human rights.
Dominican voters seem to be rewarding Abinader for the crackdown, with the incumbent favored to get more than the 50% support needed to win in the first round of voting. If no candidate reaches the 50% mark a runoff between the top vote-getters would be held.
Ana Pagán, a 34-year-old supervisor at a communications company in the country’s capital of Santo Domingo, said she approved of the border wall being built and the measures taken by the government.
“No foreigner who wants to stay here in the Dominican Republic should do so illegally, and that’s what (the government) has said,” she said.
However, Pagán said the wall doesn’t solve all of the country’s issues, and she referred to what have been the other key electoral issues for Dominicans: crime and endemic corruption. Pagán said many of the country’s security problems come from corrupt officials allowing smuggling and other crimes.
While Dominican voters want continued a government crackdown on migrants, many of the hundreds of thousands of Haitians in the Dominican Republic live in fear.
Haiti, long stricken by tragedy, has been in a downward spiral since the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in 2021. Gangs have warred for power, injecting terror and turmoil into the lives of many in the Caribbean nation.
In recent weeks – following the prime minister’s resignation – a transition council tasked with choosing Haiti’s new leaders has offered a small dose of hope of easing some of the country’s many woes.
The ongoing violence has forced many to flee their homes and seek refuge in places like the Dominican Republic and the United States. The Dominican government’s policies have stirred concerns among both newly arrived migrants and Haitians that have long called the Dominican Republic home.
Yani Rimpel, a 35-year-old Haitian businesswoman in the eastern city of Veron, has lived in the country for 20 years. She told the AP she’s never seen such uncertainty among Haitian communities, something she attributes to Abinader’s migratory policy.
Two weeks ago, she said immigration agents broke into her house at dawn with heavily armed soldiers in tow. She said they searched the house and stole cash she saved up to buy and sell merchandise, leaving her without any means to support herself.
“If (Abinader) stays in power, I can’t live here. I’m going to have to move back to my house in Haiti. Because here I have no value. I’m not safe. I don’t have a way to live here if he continues” as president, she said.
——
Megan Janetsky reported from Mexico City.
veryGood! (483)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- The origins of candy corn: A divisive delicacy, destined to be a Halloween tradition
- Slavery reparations in Amherst Massachusetts could include funding for youth programs and housing
- Japan criticizes Russian ban on its seafood following the release of treated radioactive water
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Jewish students plaster Paris walls with photos of French citizens believed held hostage by Hamas
- NYPD celebrates members of Hispanic heritage
- Saturday Night Live Tackles Joe Alwyn and Matty Healy in Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce Sketch
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi's Romance Is a Love Song
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Delaware man charged in kidnapping of 11-year-old New Jersey girl after online gaming
- How AI is speeding up scientific discoveries
- 6-year-old boy is buried, mother treated after attack that police call an anti-Muslim hate crime
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Pete Davidson talks on 'SNL' about Israel-Hamas war and losing his dad on 9/11
- Palestinians scramble to find food, safety and water as Israeli ground invasion looms
- Jury selection to begin Friday in first Georgia election interference trial
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Buffalo Bills running back Damien Harris leaves field in ambulance after suffering neck injury in Giants game
Louisiana couple gives birth to rare 'spontaneous' identical triplets
Full transcript of Face the Nation, Oct. 15, 2023
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Louvre Museum in Paris was evacuated after a threat; France under high alert
Indonesia’s top court rules against lowering age limit of presidential, vice presidential candidates
Russia’s foreign minister will visit North Korea amid claims of weapons supplied to Moscow