A/HRC/7/19/Add.5
A/HRC/7/23/Add.3
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Africans and their descendents ought to have in the national memory of the country and counter
the invisibility and silence that black Dominicans face in all spheres of society.
B. Analysis of the independent expert
100. Based on consultations held during the course of her visit the independent expert on
minority issues makes the following analysis of the situation of persons belonging to minorities
in the Dominican Republic. The legal framework for the analysis is the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, the treaty obligations of the Dominican Republic and the Declaration on the
Rights of Minorities.
101. The independent expert is concerned by Government references to upwards of one
million Haitians living in the Dominican Republic as if they are a monolithic group without
distinction. She notes that this is patently not the case. While there are many recent migrants,
many others have lived in the Dominican Republic for decades and formed settled communities.
There are now second and third generations born in the Dominican Republic at a time when it
was widely understood that the Constitution’s jus soli provision granted them citizenship. The
vast majority have been employed and contributed economically to Dominican society over
many decades, having developed strong social and economic ties with the country.
102. All Haitians living in the Dominican Republic, regardless of distinctions, are now having
their presence questioned, even if they have been issued with official documents in the past.
They complain that they currently live in a climate of uncertainty and fear over their future. The
independent expert has found that by failing to make distinctions in the status of persons of
Haitian descent, Government officials treat them all as illegal migrants, subject to discriminatory
practices, unjustified expulsions, denial of their rights and ultimately also denial of legitimate
expectations of citizenship.
103. The independent expert considers persons of Haitian heritage living in the Dominican
Republic to be persons belonging to a minority group with rights as elaborated in the 1992
Declaration on the Rights of Minorities. They have that status regardless of whether they are
duly recognized as citizens by the Dominican Republic or not. It is now recognized that the
obligation of States with respect to the rights of minorities is not limited solely to its citizens.
Non-citizens, including migrants, may under circumstances such as those in the Dominican
Republic make legitimate claims to government to respect and protect their rights as
minorities. 14 States owe a duty to respect, protect and promote the full panoply of human rights
of all within their territory with only a few limitations attaching to the status of non-citizens
(certain political rights, access to public service, consular protection, the right to enter and
remain in the country). Of critical importance is the right to non-discrimination on prohibited
grounds as it applies to nationality. Once citizenship is acquired, it cannot be arbitrarily
withdrawn collectively on the basis of minority status or national origin.
104. The independent expert is in total agreement with the analysis of the Special Rapporteur
regarding the deeply rooted societal prejudice in the Dominican Republic against people with
dark skins and African features and that for historical reasons racial prejudice and anti14
See full discussion in the 2007 annual report of the independent expert (A/HRC/7/23).