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CRIMINAL DEPORTEES AND RETURNED TEENS
A Migration Phenomenon, A Social Problem
May 1999
by: Privat Precil, Attorney and Journalist
In recent years, many Caribbean countries, particularly Jamaica,
Dominican Republic and Haiti, are facing a phenomenon that becomes
more and more worrisome as the United States has greatly changed
its criminal and immigration laws. In response to their own social
problems, particularly crime and overpopulation, authorities of
industrialized countries turn themselves against immigrants who
are arrested even for minor, non-violent offenses.
Adjusting the laws on immigration at their ease, these authorities
deport, individually or by group, immigrant prisoners after they
have finished their prison time. Sometimes this job is facilitated
by immigrant parents wishing to protect their kids from the defects
of the receiving society. They simply chose the easy way of returning
them to their country of origin.
Without supervision and care in the majority of the cases, those
returning teenagers often become part of a marginal population in
their native country. Criminal deportees and displaced kids are
therefore in the middle of a social turbulence, which other than
through a law enforcement perspective, is hardly being addressed.
The receiving country does not want them and the parents are tired
of them.
Very few ask themselves questions about their presence -- why they
are there and why are their native countries so quick to hold them
responsible for the rise in crime.
The Migration Phenomenon: Grounds for Deportations
The problem of deportation is tied to the migration problem. The
irregular development process of the Caribbean countries for the
last few years has caused a non-stop exodus of migrants looking
for economic opportunities. In addition to the large population
shifts provoked by economic inadequacy, most of these countries
are facing migration due to political reasons.
This unverifiable exodus of populations from one country to another
often creates a regional instability, and in some cases, friction
among neighbouring states. To correct the situation, some adopt
a restrictive migration policy.
The world population has increased from 3 billion in 1960 to 5.7
billion in 1992. By the year 2002 the world population will reach
8 million and 10 billion by 2100. Approximately 85% of the people
living on the earth are in the less developed countries (1) and
while some countries pay close attention to population control,
others pay little attention to such a problem or are unable to address
it.
Migration Policy Changes
Changes in immigration laws to allow foreigners in are sometimes
sponsored by governments of developed countries to attract nationalities
of poor countries in order to raise their labour force. In this
case, they reduce traveling restrictions and migration rises. At
other times, when there is no immediate need for an immigrant labour
force, the migration become restrictive and all means are used to
complicate the life of the immigrant. These barriers and obstacles
become evident in difficulties obtaining visas, high surveillance
at the borders, mass deportation without apparent reasons, as well
as countless other techniques employed.
One of the new barriers of the developed countries is the deportation
of legal residents who are convicted of either a felony or a misdemeanor
of any nature. The most alarming and questionable new legislation
used is the U.S. 1996 Anti-Terrorist Act under which persons who
commit a crime of any nature in the past -- even twenty years prior
-- and although they satisfied their sentence, and may have been
living productive, outstanding lives, must, by law, be deported.
Additionally, the new laws stripped judges at all levels from using
discretion in individual cases where mitigating circumstances may
be present.
Larry Rohter, of the New York Times, in discussing the harshness
of these new policies commented that, "Inflexibilities built
in the law have trapped and marked for deportation a small but significant
number of people who under other circumstances would be considered
good candidates to becoming law abiding and productive" . (2)
Troublemakers or Victims of the New World Order
A criminal deportee is not an extradited wanted for crime in his
country, nor a repatriated pushed back because of his irregular
status in a foreign country, nor an international undesirable wanted
for terrorist actions. In the majority of the cases, he is a legal
resident who left his country as a child and is adapted to the new
country, having grown up as if a citizen there.
Apprehended, his status of immigrant will be grounds for deportation.
In some instances, he is cleared of charges, although most of the
time immigrants are bullied or tricked into making admissions of
guilt thereby forcing mandatory deportation. But once deported,
he has very little chance to enjoy any reversal that may be decided
on appeal, and more than likely will never be able to return to
the deporting country.
A "returned teen", on the other hand, is displaced by
his immigrant parents, who may have many reasons to justify their
action. At best, they send material support to the returned teen;
at worse they abandon them to the receiving relatives or friends
for whom life is already difficult enough. Often loosing their residency,
returned teens may eventually regain access to the country where
they grew up.
Criminal deportees and displaced teens share many of the same problems:
no stable family, nostalgia for the life of the big cities and the
families left behind. Recognizing each other easily by their dress
style or by their unique behaviour, criminal deportees and displaced
teens often "hang" together forming a recognizable minority.
This phenomenon has become of great concern for Caribbean countries.
A Means to Clear the Biggest Penitentiary of the World
The case of the United States deserves special attention. In the
U.S., every 20 seconds someone is arrested for an offense related
to drugs and every week a new prison is built to house more and
more people. The U.S. now has the largest prison population in the
world, far surpassing the numbers of prisoners that previously alarmed
the world under apartheid South Africa or communist Soviet Union.
According to Goldberg and Evans in Turning the Tide, (3)
"The number of people in US prisons has more than tripled in
the past 17 years, from 500,000 in 1980 to 1.8 million in 1997.
Today, more than five million people are behind bars, on parole,
probation, or under other supervision by the criminal justice system."
Goldberg and Evans further explain, "The monumental commitment
to lock up a sizable percentage of the population is an integral
part of the globalization of capital. Several strands converge --
the end of the Cold War, changing relations between labour and capital
on an international scale, domestic economic decline, racism, the
US role as policeman of the world, and growth of the international
drug economy -- creating a booming prison/industrial complex. And
the prison industrial complex is rapidly becoming an essential component
of the US economy."
Deep cuts in social service budgets in recent years have left the
U.S. youth without sufficient support services. Direct correlations
have been drawn between these budget cuts and the rise in crime
committed by youth. With new laws which broaden and enlarge categories
of crimes and mandatory sentences carrying lengthy prison stays,
the U.S. is eager to deport immigrants to make space for new prisoners.
The Immigration and Naturalization Service: A Super-equipped
Institution
The new tools put at the disposal of the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) are extraordinary. This is the most equipped law enforcement
institution in the U.S. (4) They have more weapons than
any other institution. Even the Customs Service is overpowered by
the INS armada. While the budget of other agencies is cut, the one
for INS has been raised. Recently, 128.7 million dollars were added
to the regular allocation and 1,400 new employees were assigned
to detention and deportation services.
The Caribbean: An Affected Area
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Caribbean Summit -
Barbados Declaration
Association for Prosperity and Security in the Caribbean,
May 10, 1997
Section 9.3 - 9.7 Criminal deportations
We recognize the right of each government to define his
positions about deportation in light of the international
law and agree:
9.3 To provide sufficient information in advance to the authorities
before any deportation of criminals;
9.4 To provide appropriate information about the person about
to be deported;
9.5 To make sure, prior to deportation, that the deportee
is a national of the receiving country;
9.6 To exchange information on other issues related to the
deportation;
9.7 To work in order to improve conditions to facilitate
the deportee to have access to his personal belongings from
the country that is going to deport him. We note that the
U.S.A. intends to offer technical assistance in establishing
parole and monitoring systems.
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Against this backdrop, many Caribbean countries such as the Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Jamaica and Haiti have been negatively impacted
by the U.S. social problems.
According to the New York Times (5) nearly 300,000 immigrants
were expelled from the U.S. to countries around the world for various
reasons (criminal and non-criminal) in the two-year period following
legislation in 1996. Of that figure, 106,000 immigrants with criminal
convictions were deported in 1998, a 52 percent increase over the
previous two years. The countries receiving the majority of those
expelled are Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Dominican
Republic, Jamaica, Colombia, Canada and Ecuador.
Angry at the large numbers of criminal deportees being dumped at
their ports, many Caribbean nations raised their objections to the
U.S. through Caribbean Community (CARICOM) meetings. The Foreign
Affairs Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, Ralph Maraj, told Caribbean
Week (6) that there was "no forewarning about the
repatriation," which were instead done in a "rather sudden
and ad hoc manner." Maraj declared that, "We consider
it a very, very serious (problem), because deportation is now being
executed at the discretion of the US, and it is unplanned and uncoordinated
with the particular CARICOM governments." An aid to Maraj stated
that "The law is that if you commit a crime in the US and if
you are a legal resident, once you have served time you are deported,
and that is the problem we are facing."
Questioning the CARICOM nations' abilities to cope with this new
dynamic, Maraj asked "If these people are uncontrollable in
the large US system, with its level of resources and sophistication,
are they likely to be controlled by small Caribbean States?"
These protests by CARICOM member nations led to an agreement (7)
between those nations and the U.S., made during the CARICOM meeting
in Barbados attended by President Clinton (See Box: Barbados Declaration).
However, to date, those member countries claim that little if anything
has been done by the U.S. to follow through on their agreement.
Such lack of coordination and disregard for security and social
concerns of Caribbean nations who have little resources, in turn
forces these small countries to take measures that often violate
the human rights of the deportees.

Statistics provided by: Office of Policy and Planning, U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Haiti: A Special Case
Although Haiti receives a very small number of criminal deportees
in comparison with its neighbouring countries (See bar graph of
Criminal Alien Deportations from the U.S.), it is still of grave
concern to those responsible for public security. Haiti, still a
young democracy, is battling insecurity on many fronts through a
3-year old civilian police force and a dysfunctional justice system
still to be overhauled. Additionally, Haiti is overwhelmed by the
challenges of combating drug trafficking, which is a major contributing
factor in recent violence and instability.
A breakdown of the crimes committed by those deported to Haiti
in Fiscal year 1998 (See pie chart: Criminal Alien Deportations
from U.S. to Haiti, Breakdown by Criminal Charge) reveals that half
of the crimes were drug-related despite the general perception that
all criminal deportees are "killers." Homicide, in fact,
only accounted for 3 out of the total 202 for that year.

Total deportations to Haiti in Fiscal Year 1998: 202 (192 men
and 10 women). Statistics provided by: Office of Policy and Planning,
INS.
As to the question of the amount of crime or "insecurity"
the criminal deportees are responsible for in Haiti, Donna DeCesare
in researching her article for the NACLA Report on the Americas,
spoke with a police inspector in Cité Soleil, a large slum
on the north side of Port-au-Prince, who said that, "Base Big
Up, our largest gang, existed here in the Cité when I was
a child growing up... None of these guys has ever been to the United
States... They operate in Cité Soleil and hide out in Delmas.
Their connections are to Haitian criminal elites, not American jails."
DeCesare writes that he also informed her that, "the leaders
of Haiti's most notorious gangs include corrupt cops drummed out
of the newly formed Haitian National Police and former Macoutes
as well as members of criminal families." (8)
Ambassador Colin Granderson who heads MICIVIH, a joint civilian
UN/OAS human rights observer mission in Haiti, pointed out to Roeland
Muskens of onzeWereld (9) the irony of the situation,
"On one hand, the United States is worried about the stability
of Haiti, but at the same time they burden the country with derailed
people who have no place in Haitian society".
While officially deportees are not jailed in any other country
in the region, Haitian authorities, because of level of "insecurity"
and, contrary to all international rules, send the deportees to
jail without any regard for their rights.
The history of a group of deportees who arrived on March 24, 1998,
is an illustration. (10) On this date, the U.S. prisoner
transport system returned 38 Haitian citizens to their homeland.
When they arrived at the International Airport of Port-au-Prince,
all of them were jailed. The press, the judicial power, the police
were invited to attend the "event." (11) For
four months, Alternative Chance (a non-governmental organization)
appealed to the Haitian judicial authorities for their release.
In spite of an extraordinary process of habeas corpus filed on May
11, 1998, none of them were released.
Defenses for the Prisoners Were Around these Points
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Important Articles from Haitian Law and International
Treaties Applicable to the Case of Criminal Deportees:
Article 26 of the Haitian Constitution of 1987
regarding legalization of an arrest;
Article 30 of the Code of Criminal Instruction, last
paragraph: "The prosecutor immediately interrogates the
prisoner brought to him and awards a warrant if it is necessary;"
Article 35 of the Code of Criminal Instruction reinforced
by a decree of the Tribunal of Cassation on January 20, 1920
stating: "The prosecutor will transmit, without delay,
the reports, proceedings, and ceased materials to the Judge
of Instruction;"
Article 14, paragraph 3 of the International Pact Relative
to Civil and Political Rights ratified by Haiti that demands
that a person in detention must be judged without excessive
delay. Paragraph 7 of the same article declares that "no
one can be prosecuted or punished for an offense for which
he was already acquitted or sentenced by a definitive sentence
in accordance with the law and penal proceedings of each country;
Decree of July 26, 1979 setting a 90 day or three
month deadline to the Judge of Instruction to close his instruction.
When the prosecutor receives a file from the Judge of Instruction,
he has three days or 72 hours to make his requisition.
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These prisoners had already served their prison sentences abroad
making their detention in Haiti illegal. According to Article 14
of the International Agreement Relative to Political and Civil Rights
-- of which Haiti is signed onto and in accordance with the dispositions
of its Article 49 "no one can be prosecuted or punished for
a violation for which he was cleared or condemned..."
On the other hand, according to Article 5 of the Haitian Criminal
Instruction Code, the legal action in Haiti regarding crime committed
in foreign countries, is submitted to the following conditions:
That the infraction is qualified as a crime
That it was committed by a Haitian
That it was committed against a Haitian
That the accused is back in Haiti
That he was not prosecuted and judged in a foreign country
Finally that the offended Haitian has filed a complaint
In the case of a crime against the security of the country such
as counterfeiting, etc, the Haitian will be charged as soon as he
is held. Additionally, Article 7 of the Code of Criminal Instruction
states that "any Hatian national responsible for a crime against
another Haitian outside the country, will be, when he returns to
Haiti, prosecuted and judged, if he was not convicted outside and
if the victim has pressed charges against him."
However, regarding the 38 prisoners, none of these conditions were
applicable -- there was no complaint and the prisoners had already
paid their time. Indeed, we understand the concern of the Haitian
authorities to be concerned about people sent back to the country.
Alternative Chance, in search for a transition from the prison to
their families, twice submitted a reinsertion plan to the Ministry
of Justice for consideration to no avail. Left with no alternative,
Alternative Chance submitted a habeas corpus before the Supreme
Court asking for review of the illegal arrests and detentions, and
an order for the immediate release of the prisoners without delay.
At mid-July 1998, after four months of custody, the 38 were finally
freed. But concern about individual liberties is still at stake.
In any case, imprisonment is far from being the ideal solution on
this matter. The director of the National Coalition for Haitian
Rights (NCHR) office in Haiti, Pierre Esperance, declared in a report
of his office on the matter that "With deportees arriving weekly,
NCHR encourages the government to develop an appropriate plan of
action, one that will facilitate their social reintegration and
encourage them to become productive members of Haitian society,
rather than violate their human and constitutional liberties."
Alternative Chance ("Chans Altenativ")
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At a recent fund raiser for the programme which featured
a reading of her new book by Edwidge Danticat, one of its
young participants honestly addressed the guests, "The
programme has given me a chance to reconsider my mistakes
and problems so I can learn how to overcome them, with a new
source of energy going from negative to positive, not with
violence, but a free choice...In my opinion, Alternative Chance
can't change anybody -- but it can help the one that wants
to improve...Coming back to Haiti as a criminal deportee was
not easy for me because I had to face the discrimination of
the people that were supposed to help me. Alternative Chance
was for me a bridge between the world in which I grew up and
where I live now." (Aubelin Jolicoeur, "Edwige Danticat
et Alternative Chance de Michelle Karshan chez Dr. Jacques
Bartoli," Le Nouvelliste, 10 November 1998, 20.)
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Alternative Chance was founded in 1996 by Michelle Karshan, an
American activist living in Haiti, along with four criminal deportees
and one young man returned by his parents. Karshan, the Executive
Director, described the programme to The Transformer as, "...an
integration program for criminal aliens deported to Haiti from the
U.S. and Canada...is the first reintegration program for deportees
in the Americas. Providing support services and community to new
arrivals, some of whom haven't been to Haiti since they were infants,
is a daunting and trail-blazing task!"
Karshan points out that, "Immediate needs range from housing,
food, medical care, drug counseling, to learning the language and
a marketable skill from which one can earn a living. A critical
component of the program is our orientation process during which
we talk about the history of Haiti, the transition from army to
a civilian police, the government structure and the Constitution.
Additionally, peer counselors share vital information on survival,
such as why one should not drink the water, and how to live non-violently
and create a productive life in Haiti." (12)
In 1997, MACLEAN'S magazine's Andrew Phillips exclaimed: "...in
Haiti, some deportees are involved in something that hasn't been
tried anywhere else: a program designed to help them make new lives
and keep away from crime... It's not easy: unemployment in Haiti
runs around 80 percent, and the few jobs that exist pay minuscule
wages by North American sandards..." (13)
Haitian authorities did not pay much attention to the project at
the beginning although some attended the meetings called by Alternative
Chance to work through collaboration. Requests to the Haitian government,
its Police Chief, and its tax office to find a location to house
a centre did not materialize. Ironically, authorities acknowledge
that such a project does provide the possibility to give deportees
an orientation to help with their new life.
In many cases those sent back to Haiti were not actually born in
Haiti. Instead, some were born in the Bahamas or France and being
born there does not make one a national of that country without
completing an application process. In these cases, it is possible
that the deportee has never even visited Haiti before and has no
family left in the country.
A most startling case is that of Thomas Christopher O'Toole Sylvain,
born in the Bronx in 1978 to an Irish-American mother and a Haitian
father.(14) After doing his prison time in Florida, he
was sent to Haiti without the proper papers -- in direct violation
of Article 9.5 of the Barbados Declaration which states that the
deporting country would, "Make sure, prior to deportation,
that the deportee is a national of the receiving country."
He had maintained that he was an American citizen and presented
a birth certificate and a passport. But still, U.S. Immigration
officials maintained that he was not the person his parents claimed
that he was. After one month in Haiti, Sylvain became gravely ill,
deteriorating rapidly from an undiagnosed condition.
Emaciated and near death, Alternative Chance, following up on the
extensive Miami Herald coverage, intervened and put Sylvain in a
private hospital for diagnosis and care while advocates in the United
States were fighting for his return to his native country. Two months
after the matter was brought to the attention of the U.S. government
and after two congresspersons got involved, the INS finally admitted
that Sylvain is an American born citizen. The medical evacuation
took more than 24-hours despite the doctors warning that Sylvain
might die within the day. En route from the air ambulance to a Miami
hospital, Sylvain suffered a heart attack because of the deterioration
of his condition.
Persecuted in Both Worlds
In a world more inclined towards repression than prevention, it
is easy to be in trouble because one can be "in the wrong place
at the wrong time."
After the Guyanese police shot and killed five deportees in a house
near Georgetown, a representative of the Guyanese Association for
Human Rights (GHRA), said that, "shooting bandits to death
is a spectacular demonstration to disguise the inability on the
part of the police to gather evidence which will stand up in court."
(15) "To date", the GHRA alleged, "the
police have not shown any persuasive evidence to link deportees
with serious crimes or the recent crime wave in Guyana." Additionally,
in making out its case against police demands for wider powers,
the GHRA says that "the force is yet to successfully prosecute
any of the big drug kingpins operating in the country, and that
targeting so-called deportees with drug convictions is unfair."
Ambassador Granderson seeing a possible upside to the dynamic of
criminal deportees told onzeWereld that, "with the support
a well-conceived orientation, these young people can bring a valid
contribution to the Haitian society. They have a big advantage:
they speak English and they know the American society. The Haitian
economy can broadly profit of this situation." (16)
Privat Precil was the former Director of the Government of Haiti's
Office on National Migration and was the Government of Haiti representative
at the Conference on the Dynamics of Migration held in Costa Rica
in 1996. Currently Mr. Precil practices law in Haiti and is admitted
to practice under the Port-au-Prince Bar Association. Mr. Precil
is the pro bono attorney for Alternative Chance ("Chans Altenativ")
in Haiti.
Addresses:
Alternative Chance (Chans Altenativ)
c/o Lynx Air International
P.O. Box 407139
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33340
in Haiti: (509) 245-4117
e-mail: altchance@aol.com
Amnesty International
322 8th Avenue
New York, New York 10011, USA
(1-212) 807-8400
Human Rights Watch/Americas
1522 K Street, N.W., Suite 910
Washington, D.C. 20005-1202
MICIVIH
Delmas 33
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
(509) 223-4044, 223-4027, 223-4047, 221-7709, 221-7690, 221-7849
United States Embassy
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
(509) 222-0200
Ministry of Justice
Avenue Charles Summer
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Cite de l'Exposition
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
(509) 222-8482
Ministry of Haitians Living Abroad
Jean Paul II
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
National Coalition for Haitian Rights
10 Rue Fougere, Delmas 71
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
e-mail: nchrhaiti@maf.org
(509) 246-2540/4146
Office for the Protection of Citizens
37 Rue Duncombe
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
(509) 245-7006
The Open Society - Forced
Migration Project
400 West 59th Street
New York, New York 10019, USA
Platform of Haitian Organizations for Human Rights
Casier Postal 19181
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
USA Lawyers Committee for International Human Rights
330 7th Avenue
New York, New York 10001, USA
(1-212) 629-6170
Endnotes
- FNUAP Bulletin, 1997.
- Larry Rohter, "In U.S. Deportation Policy, a Pandora's
Box," The New York Times, 10 August 1997, 1.
- Eve Goldberg and Linda Evans, "The Prison Industrial Complex
and the Global Economy," Turning the Tide - Journal of Anti-Racist
Activism, Research and Education, Volume 11, Number 2, Summer
1998.
- Mirta Ojito, "Change in Laws Sets Off Big Wave of Deportations,"
The New York Times, 15 December 1998, 1.
- Mirta Ojito, "Change in Laws Sets Off Big Wave of Deportations,"
The New York Times, 15 December 1998, 1.
- Ken Ali, "Criminals Causing Concern," Caribbean Week,
12-25 April 1997, 8.
- Barbados Declaration made between CARICOM member countries and
the United States at the Caribbean Summit, Association for the
Prosperity and Security in the Caribbean, Agreement dated May
10, 1997, Section 9.3 - 9.7.
- Donna DeCesare, "Deported 'Home' to Haiti," NACLA
Report on the Americas, November/December 1998, 6-10.
- Roeland Muskens, "Enkele Reis Vagevuur," onzeWereld,
March 1998, 8-12.
- Caitlin Montague, "Mistreatment of Criminal Deportees to
Haiti," National Coalition for Haitian Rights, Special Report,
1998.
- "Haro sur la Police!, Haiti en Marche, 8-14 April 1998,
1.
- Michelle Karshan, "Haiti: Alternative Chance and the Alternatives
to Violence Project a Perfect Match," The Transformer, Winter
1998, 4.
- Andrew Phillips, "Caught Between Two Worlds," MACLEAN'S,
15 December 1997, 31.
- Yves Colon, "Citizen-claimant Sent to Haiti Still Very
Ill," The Miami Herald, 4 May 1999, 1b.
- "Caribbean-Crime: Don't Blame Deportees Says Human Rights
Group," Inter-Press Service, 12 June 1997.
- Roeland Muskens, "Enkele Reis Vagevuur," onzeWereld,
March 1998, 8-12.
Media Briefing Index
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