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Wikileaks: Gobierno Dominicano negaba ciudadanía a haitianos amparado en el Artículo 11 de la Constitución Dominicana

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Wikileaks: Gobierno Dominicano negaba ciudadanía a haitianos amparado en el Artículo 11 de la Constitución Dominicana

Un cable de wikileaks revela las preocupaciones del entonces embajador haitiano en el país, Guy Alexandre –tres semanas antes de su renuncia– con el embajador norteamericano Hans Hertell -el 1 de diciembre del 2003- para discutir sobre relaciones bilaterales dominico-haitianas.

Alexandre estaba profundamente preocupado por la aparente indiferencia del Gobierno Dominicano -para esa fecha Hipólito Mejía era el presidente- en las investigaciones relativas a los órganos de Haití, que se habían descubierto a lo largo de la frontera en septiembre.

Guy Alexandre dijo –según el cable- que el Gobierno Dominicano no estaba haciendo lo suficiente para documentar los haitianos y se quejó de que a menudo se utilizaba el artículo 11 de la Constitución de la República Dominicana (que establece que toda persona nacida en territorio dominicano es Dominicana, excepto hijos de diplomáticos o extranjeros en tránsito) para negar la ciudadanía a los haitianos por ser «extranjeros en tránsito».

Click para ver el cable original de wikileaks del 23-12-2003

El embajador Alexandre también culpó por el fracaso de la iniciativa de 2001 de la OEA y sobre la falta de la imparcialidad de la organización. (Nota: Este argumento fue reiterado en la reunión de seguimiento el 18 de diciembre, día que se conoció su renuncia).

Cable Original

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 SANTO DOMINGO 007536

SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/CAR, DEPT PLEASE PASS TO USOAS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/22/2013

TAGS: PGOV PREL PHUM PINR DR HA

SUBJECT: HAITIAN AMBASSADOR TO DOMINICAN REPUBLIC RESIGNS:

ANOTHER BLOW TO ARISTIDE

REF: A. PORT AU PRINCE 2540

¶B. SANTO DOMINGO 4930

Classified By: ACTING DCM MARY B. MARSHALL FOR REASONS 1.5 B/D

SUMMARY

¶1. (C) On December 18 the Haitian Ambassador to the Dominican

Republic Guy Alexandre called on the Ambassador and Acting

DCM to confirm his resignation. The sudden news (prompted by

the violent December 5 crackdown on student demonstrators in

Haiti) was widely covered December 16 while Ambassador

Alexandre was out of the country visiting his wife in Puerto

Rico. Ambassdor Alexandre’s resignation is due to what he

described as «incompatible principles» with Arisitide’s

government. Composed but staunch in his resolve, Alexandre

assured the Ambassador that he has no plans to seek asylum in

the United States for now. Requesting asylum, he explained,

would «further complicate Dominican-Haitian bilateral

relations» and would not be in his nor Haiti’s best

interests. Instead, Alexandre said he would seek residency

in the Dominican Republic and teach at a university. End

Summary.

ALEXANDRE RESIGNS AS AMBASSADOR TO THE DR

¶2. (C) Ambassador Guy Alexandre met with the Ambassador and

Acting DCM on December 18 to discuss his recent resignation.

He said that he had planned to leave his post in January 2004

after Haiti’s independence bicentennial celebrations, which

would have also marked two years in his assignment. However,

he could not ignore the recent violence against students in

Haiti because of his strong links to the academic community

there. According to Alexandre, police officers broke both

knees of one of his friends, a vice-rector at a university

(Ref A). The December 5 violence, he lamented, «produced an

irrevocable situation that cannot be easily fixed,»

following months of extreme polarization and resulting chaos.

¶3. (C) According to Ambassador Alexandre’s contacts in Haiti,

there are daily protests or preemptive crackdowns by police

on potential protests. He warned of an upsurge in armed

civilians looking for trouble. Alexandre expressed his

concern that the environment in Haiti is ripe for

confrontation, which might subside briefly during Christmas

but is sure to resume in January. He commented that Haiti

has minimal capacity to maintain order and that «none of the

Haitian politicians realize that the country is a ticking

time bomb.»

REMOVE ARISTIDE…THEN WHAT?

¶4. (C) Ambassador Alexandre criticized opposition groups’

preoccupation with forcing Aristide’s departure without

considering the consequences. He emphasized that Aristide’s

exit will not solve Haiti’s socio-economic problems.

Alexandre also criticized his countrymen for their focus on

grabbing power rather than tackling the difficult problems of

health, education and infrastructure. The Ambassador asked

Alexandre whether there are clandestine movements in the

Dominican Republic working to overthrow Aristide, to which

Alexandre responded that he does not know of any such

activity. He acknowledged that some disgruntled former

Haitian military officers reside in the Dominican Republic,

but said most of the pressure on Aristide originates in

Haiti. He recalled the 1991-94 period when many Haitians

fled the country, but claimed there was no no mass migration.

During that time Alexandre personally assisted 30 Haitians,

including a former Army chief.

DOMINICAN-HAITIAN BILATERAL RELATIONS

¶5. (C) Less than three weeks before his resignation,

Ambassador Alexandre met with the Ambassador on December 1 to

discuss concerns about Dominican-Haitian bilateral relations.

He was disturbed about the GODR’s apparent nonchalant

investigations regarding the Haitian bodies discovered along

the border in September (Ref B). Alexandre also said the

GODR is not doing enough to document Haitians. He complained

that the GODR often uses Article 11 of the Dominican

Constitution (providing that anyone born on Dominican soil is

Dominican except offspring of diplomats or foreigners in

transit) to deny citizenship to Haitians for being

«foreigners in transit.» Ambassador Alexandre also blamed

the failure of the 2001 OAS initiative on a lack of OAS

impartiality (Note: This argument was reiterated at the

follow-up meeting on December 18. End note).

ALEXANDRE’S ONWARD PLANS

¶6. (C) Alexandre said he currently plans to reside in the

Dominican Republic, not flee to the United States. He was

traveling to Puerto Rico when his resignation hit the press

and returned quickly thereafter. He emphasized his desire to

get involved in academia and denied having strong ties to

successful Haitian expats in the United States. Alexandre

did ask the Acting DCM (Consul General) that his B1/B2

nonimmigrant visa be transferred to his tourist passport.

Alexandre said the GOH had not yet accepted his resignation.

He claimed to have no interest in politics because he «knows

too well what Haiti needs.»

HERTELL

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