by Anne Eller (Haiti Liberte)
Over the past
two years, a legal nightmare has grown in the Dominican Republic. Taking aim at
Haitians and Dominicans of Haitian descent, the Dominican Constitutional
Tribunal issued a ruling in September 2013, made retroactive more than eighty
years, stripping citizenship from anyone who cannot prove “regular” residency
for at least one parent. Legislation passed in May 2014 allows for a limited
and incomplete path to naturalization for some; it amounts to “citizenship by fiat.” The rulings mark a drastic
setback for as many as several hundred thousand residents of the Dominican
Republic, threatening them with expulsion, statelessness, detention, and abuse.
Individuals have already suffered the impact of the new laws. With the
rulings, larger-scale detentions might begin, overseen by the Dominican armed forces and the UN,
among other groups.