A/HRC/7/19/Add.5
A/HRC/7/23/Add.3
Page 28
Haitianism have been conflated. The independent expert believes that these attitudes have
provided a kind of moral license for harsh discriminatory policies and practices toward Haitians,
the unjust denial of their rights to legal status and citizenship, disregard for their inhumane living
conditions, for example on the bateyes and the hyper-exploitation of their labour.
105. The independent expert fully supports the findings and judgement of the Inter-American
Court in the case of Yean and Bosico vs. the Dominican Republic and its observations inter alia
that: nationality is the legal bond that guarantees individuals the full enjoyment of all human
rights as a member the political community; although States maintain the sovereign right to
regulate nationality, their discretion must be limited by international human rights standards that
protect individuals against arbitrary State actions; States are particularly limited in their
discretion to grant nationality by their obligations to guarantee equal protection before the law
and to prevent, avoid, and reduce statelessness; in granting nationality, States must abstain from
producing and enforcing regulations that are discriminatory on the face of it or that have adverse
discriminatory effects on certain population groups.
106. Nationality is a fundamental human right and if there is no other nationality available at
birth, to avoid statelessness there is a right to the nationality of the State in which the person is
born. No person should be arbitrarily deprived of their nationality.
107. Furthermore, while States may create distinctions in the enjoyment of certain benefits
between citizens, non-citizens with lawful status and non-citizens without lawful status, the
content of the distinction must comply strictly with human rights norms. Under no circumstances
can those distinctions be allowed to create an adverse impact on a certain category of people, by
intention or consequence, based on race, colour or national origin.
108. While the possession of identity documents does not ipso facto determine status, lack of
documents creates extreme vulnerability to arbitrary denial of rights and legal personality,
particularly procedural due process. In this case, there is sufficient evidence that documents are
being denied or withheld on racially discriminatory grounds. Ultimately, persons of Haitian
descent are being denied the full enjoyment of their right to citizenship on a racially
discriminatory basis.
109. As concluded by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the “in transit” exception in
the Constitution to the granting of citizenship based on jus soli cannot be interpreted to include
illegal migrants and there is no requirement that legality is a precondition to exercising the right
of nationality by birth. The independent expert concludes, therefore, that the Migration Law No.
285-04 is in conflict with article 11 of the Dominican Constitution. She is concerned that there
are indications that it will be given retroactive application and that will have far-reaching
discriminatory effects on the legal status of Dominicans of Haitian descent and Haitian migrants
in regard to access to citizenship. Application of this law to persons born in the Dominican
Republic when the Constitution’s jus soli provision was interpreted to grant them nationality
would be manifestly unjust and discriminatory against this particular minority group. It will
render them stateless.
110. Measures undertaken by the Government and implemented by the Central Electoral
Board, including via the establishment of a separate birth registration regime for newborns of