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- <text id=91TT2664>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1991: Immigration:Tragedy on the High Seas
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 02, 1991 Pearl Harbor:Day of Infamy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- IMMIGRATION
- Tragedy on the High Seas
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Coast Guard's attempts to stem a new surge of Haitian
- immigrants ignite a debate over political asylum
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID ELLIS -- Reported by Bernard Diederich/Miami and J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> If Haiti were ruled by communist dictators rather than
- military tyrants whose only ideology is power, the multitudes
- who have set sail from that downtrodden country in a desperate
- bid for freedom in the past month might well have found refuge
- in the U.S. Instead, those who dared the perilous 650-mile
- voyage toward America found that America has no place for them.
- Since the latest outpouring of Haitian refugees began, the U.S.
- Coast Guard has plucked them by the thousands from their leaky
- vessels and held them in detention centers or aboard American
- ships. And then, until a federal judge ordered a temporary halt
- to the practice last week, the U.S. shipped hundreds of them
- back to the benighted nation they had tried so desperately to
- escape.
- </p>
- <p> The exodus is in large part an unforeseen result of a
- well-intentioned U.S. policy. After the September coup that
- ousted Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti's first democratically
- elected President, the country plunged even more deeply into
- violence and deprivation. The suffering has been worsened by a
- U.S.-backed trade embargo by the Organization of American States
- designed to pressure the illegal government into restoring
- Aristide to power. Gasoline and fuel-oil supplies are scarce,
- and political repression against Aristide's supporters is
- fierce. More than 400,000 citizens have fled the capital of
- Port-au-Prince for the countryside. More than 3,300 have been
- intercepted by Coast Guard cutters as they attempted the risky
- passage to Florida. An untold number of others have perished,
- including 135 who drowned when their overloaded boat capsized
- off the coast of Cuba last Tuesday.
- </p>
- <p> That tragedy intensified demands from refugee advocates
- and Democratic Congressmen for the Bush Administration to
- suspend the forced repatriations of the boat people and permit
- them to remain in the U.S. until conditions in Haiti improve
- and the government is restored. But the President, seeking to
- dissuade thousands more Haitians from taking to the water in the
- hope of gaining asylum, insisted that the massive interception
- of the boat people that started last month must continue.
- Allowing the boat people to enter the U.S., he warned, would
- only lead more Haitians to risk their lives in the dangerous
- journey.
- </p>
- <p> Of those taken into custody by the Coast Guard, 538 have
- been shipped back to Haiti, 350 have been sent to camps in four
- Caribbean nations, and more than 2,300 are aboard Coast Guard
- cutters or have been transferred to U.S. troop ships and the
- American naval base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. According to
- Coast Guardsmen who took part in the rescue effort, many of the
- fleeing Haitians' boats are no better than floating coffins.
- Many of the passengers are so seasick, hungry and dehydrated
- that they cannot answer the questions put to them by overworked
- immigration officers stationed on the cutters.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond its professed concern for the Haitians' safety,
- however, the Administration's stance on the boat people reflects
- long-standing immigration policies. Like most nations, the U.S.
- divides would-be refugees into two groups, and treats each very
- differently. Those with a "well-founded fear of persecution"
- because of their race, religion or political views are granted
- political asylum. But the U.S. lumps all except a microscopic
- number of Haitians into the category of "economic migrants,"
- maintaining that because they are merely fleeing from poverty
- and generalized chaos and violence, they do not qualify for
- resident status. "In Haiti people are still free to practice
- their religion and to hold a job -- if they can find one,"
- explains a State Department spokesman. In 1981 the Reagan
- Administration reached an agreement with Haitian dictator "Baby
- Doc" Duvalier that permits -- but does not require -- the U.S.
- to return Haitians suspected of trying to illegally enter its
- territory, provided Haiti gives assurances that no reprisals
- will be taken against them. Through the end of 1990, more than
- 24,000 Haitian refugees were caught trying to enter the U.S.,
- but only five were granted political asylum.
- </p>
- <p> Some opponents of the Bush policy charge that it is shaped
- by racism against citizens of a black nation. Others are
- angered by the contradiction between this policy and the
- practice in other situations, when the U.S. brushed aside the
- distinction between economic and political refugees in order to
- further the fight against communism. From 1983 to 1989, for
- example, 12,316 refugees from Daniel Ortega's Nicaragua were
- welcomed by the U.S., and this year alone 2,000 Cubans have been
- granted permanent-resident status under an anti-Castro law
- passed in 1966. The U.S. has even criticized its staunchest
- allies when they tried to deport economic refugees from
- communist countries. On Oct. 17, George Bush fired off a letter
- to British Prime Minister John Major, reaffirming U.S.
- opposition to the forced repatriation of the 64,000 Vietnamese
- boat people who have sought refuge in Hong Kong until conditions
- in Vietnam improve. Four out of five of them are considered to
- be economic refugees.
- </p>
- <p> Earlier this month, when only a relative handful of
- Haitians were attempting the sea trek, some members of Congress
- asked Bush to allow some of the refugees into the U.S. on a
- temporary basis. The legislators reasoned that such a quiet
- humanitarian gesture would ease the painful effects of the
- embargo without encouraging others to flee. The Administration
- shelved the suggestion, though it did launch a perfunctory
- effort to persuade Haiti's democratic neighbors to resettle some
- of the refugees. Belize agreed to take 100 boat people -- if
- they tested negative for the AIDS virus. Honduras, Venezuela,
- Trinidad and Tobago agreed to accept a total of 450 Haitians.
- </p>
- <p> The legal and diplomatic niceties mean little to the boat
- people, who regard the voyage to America, no matter how
- daunting, as less risky than remaining in their own country.
- U.S. officials say there is no evidence that Haiti's military
- rulers will take revenge against those who have been
- repatriated. But they also admit that conditions inside Haiti
- have become so horrendous that the American embassy in
- Port-au-Prince has been reduced to a skeleton staff, leaving the
- monitoring of abuses to a beleaguered network of human-rights
- organizations. According to them, security forces under the
- command of Port-au-Prince police chief Major Michel Franois, the
- mastermind of the coup, have persecuted hundreds of young men
- believed to be Aristide supporters. Last week a Haitian
- bodyguard employed by U.S. Ambassador Alvin Adams was dragged
- out of his house by a group of unidentified gunmen and shot to
- death.
- </p>
- <p> Alain St. Ville, 27, a young Aristide supporter driven out
- by the junta, is one of just 100 Haitians who have been allowed
- to apply for political asylum since Aristide was toppled. A
- musician from Port-au-Prince's poorest neighborhood, St. Ville
- left the country in a small sailboat after a neighbor warned
- that soldiers were looking for him. "There were 52 of us," St.
- Ville says. "None of us knew the sea. It was horrible. But we
- kept saying anything is better than staying to be shot by the
- soldiers."
- </p>
- <p> Last week Aristide began negotiations for his return with
- members of Haiti's National Assembly in Cartagena, Colombia.
- There was little hope for a quick settlement, however, because
- the army leaders who hold veto power over the talks insist that
- Aristide will not be allowed back until the economic embargo is
- eased. Moreover, Jean-Jacques Honorat, premier of the illegal
- government, says the former President will face criminal charges
- if he sets foot in Haiti. For his part, Aristide has reaffirmed
- support for a military reform program, a pledge that triggered
- his overthrow in the first place. Most diplomats think Aristide
- will return several months after a new compromise Cabinet is
- appointed.
- </p>
- <p> Until the government is restored to Haiti and the embargo
- is lifted, the exodus is likely to continue. Even if the
- federal judge in Miami who temporarily enjoined the
- Administration from sending the boat people back to
- Port-au-Prince eventually rules that the repatriations are
- legal, the U.S. must find a more orderly and humane way to cope
- with the problem.
- </p>
- <p> One possible solution would be for Attorney General
- William Barr to invoke a provision of the Immigration Act of
- 1990 that permits the government to extend "temporary protected
- status" to certain foreign nationals who do not qualify for
- formal refugee status but who were displaced by war, natural
- disasters or generalized civil strife. Such protection would
- apply only to Haitians who actually reach the U.S., leaving open
- the possibility that the Coast Guard would keep on with its
- interceptions.
- </p>
- <p> If the Administration decides to be generous to fleeing
- Haitians, money for a temporary refuge program has already been
- authorized by Congress: a $35 million fund that the President
- can tap once he declares an immigration emergency. The crisis
- now unfolding off Haiti's coast surely qualifies.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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