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Dying to get out

Youths cleaning up earthquake rubble at what was once a church/school building in the Martissant neighbourhood of Port-au-Prince. March 2010 Nancy Palus/IRIN
The US government allows foreign citizens into the US in significant numbers “for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit”. In the past, the beneficiaries of this so-called “humanitarian parole” have been thousands of refugees from Indochina, Cuba and other countries during the cold war, most fleeing communist regimes.

So far, however, the government has been far less generous in granting humanitarian parole to Haitians recovering from the 12 January earthquake.

On 18 January, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced it would extend humanitarian parole on a case-by-base basis to children already in the process of being adopted by US citizens.

Parole status has also been approved for a small number of Haitians with dire medical needs, most prominently perhaps Jenny Alexis, a two-month-old baby found in the rubble of a Port-au-Prince flat four days after the earthquake. She was airlifted to Miami – without US government permission - where doctors restored her to health. Her parents were later granted humanitarian parole to be with her. In total, about 1,000 Haitians have been given parole status since the quake.

“The numbers are ridiculously small given the scale of the calamity,” said Ira Kurzban, a Miami-based attorney who has been involved in Haitian affairs since the 1970s.

In February, legislation was introduced in both houses of Congress that would extend humanitarian parole to 55,000 Haitians whose immigration applications were approved before the earthquake but who face the prospect of waiting years before gaining entry.

Rep. Yvette Clarke, the sponsor in the House of Representatives, told IRIN she had heard complaints “for years” from her Haitian constituents in Brooklyn about the need to expedite the immigration process. The bills were introduced even though Congressional approval does not appear to be necessary for the Obama administration to act. In fact, on 8 March, eight members of Congress wrote to Janet Napolitano, President Barack Obama’s secretary of the DHS, to ask that the department “consider using its parole authority” in the case of the 55,000 Haitians.

Help with reconstruction

The Haitians would be able to contribute to the reconstruction of their country by sending remittances. “You can put this into motion without a dime being spent by the US government,” said Steve Forester of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti. “It will put money into the hands of probably 500,000 people in Haiti. A Haitian working here supports as many as 10 people in Haiti, sometimes less, sometimes more. A major goal is to speed the recovery. Shouldn’t we use all means at our disposal?”

“We just don’t see the logic in having them stay five or 10 years in Haiti when it is a disaster situation,” said Shaina Aber, associate advocacy director for the Jesuit Refugee Service in Washington DC. “Their strength would be in providing remittances to Haiti.”

''A Haitian working here supports as many as 10 people in Haiti, sometimes less, sometimes more. A major goal is to speed the recovery. Shouldn’t we use all means at our disposal?''
The matter was raised with Vice-President Joe Biden after a meeting with Haitian-American community leaders in Miami on 5 April . “I went to him afterwards and told him that it was one of the most efficient ways that the Obama administration can help in the recovery process,” said Marleine Bastien, founder and executive director of Fanm Ayisyen Miyami (Haitian Women of Miami), a community organization. She said Biden was interested to learn that the proposal had support from both Republican and Democratic members of Congress from south Florida. “He said, ‘I will be sure to look into it’,” Bastien said. “He was very cautious. Hopefully we will hear something.”

Haiti advocates are also pushing for a more generous humanitarian parole policy for those in life-threatening circumstances, a classification that admittedly could include hundreds of thousands of people. Jayne Fleming, a human rights lawyer from San Francisco, travelled to Haiti in March with a team of lawyers and doctors to interview those who might qualify. They spoke to widows unable to feed their children, orphans with relatives in the US, individuals with “extreme” medical needs, and a frightening number of rape survivors. She is returning to Haiti later in the month to finalize parole applications for 52 of them.

“There are people in Haiti right now who will die if they don’t get out,” she said. “Those are the ones we see as eligible for humanitarian parole.”

pd/mw

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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