Project

Dominican Republic: Life on the Margins

Some of the most marginalized people in the Caribbean are Haitian immigrants, and their descendents, living in the Dominican Republic. Although there are Dominicans living in conditions of poverty here, Haitians face additional threats to their well-being, including racial discrimination, exploitation and deportation – conditions that reflect the historically hostile relationship between the two countries of Hispaniola.

Haitians have long provided cheap labor in the Dominican Republic. They fueled the sugar industry here, and more recently the tourism and construction boom. But their status is precarious; many find themselves trapped in a sort of stateless limbo – no longer citizens of Haiti, but also rejected by the Dominican government, and unable to access health care or education. Today, hundreds of thousands of former workers live on the country's batayes, shantytowns that once used to house sugar industry workers, where they have few political rights, and where HIV rates are some of the highest in the Western Hemisphere. Many Haitian women – as well as men and children – are involved in sex work, one of the only ways to earn cash in these forgotten sugar communities.

Now, with a devastating earthquake likely to send more Haitians across the border in search of work in construction, tourism and agriculture, the plight of these Haitians in the Dominican Republic – a population that some estimates put at 1 million people – is even more pressing.

This print, broadcast and multi-media project explores the challenges Haitians face in the Dominican Republic – as well as those encountered by other marginalized groups – with a particular focus on one of the deadliest results of their predicaments: HIV-AIDS.

The Pulitzer Center's reporting on HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean was made possible with support from the MAC AIDS Fund.

Dominican Republic: A Glimpse of the Batayes

Some of the most impoverished parts of the Dominican Republic are batayes - shantytowns that once housed sugar industry workers. For years, Haitian labor fueled the Dominican's large sugar industry. When the sector collapsed, many of these people had nowhere else to go – some had been in the country for decades and no longer had homes in Haiti; others were born in the Dominican Republic. Unemployment in the bateyes today is sky high; the HIV rate is also far higher than the national average.

Dominican Republic: The Border

Mondays and Fridays are market days in Dajabon, the small frontier town in the northwest of the Dominican Republic on the border with Haiti.

Dominican Republic: HIV in other vulnerable communities

HIV is one of the big problems facing Haitians living in the Dominican Republic. To start to get a better sense of this epidemic in the country overall we stopped by a gathering of groups that work with marginalized Dominicans, whose members were meeting with UNAIDS and government officials to talk about HIV and human rights.

Dominican Republic: Haitians living on the margins

This is the first post of Living on the Margins: Haitians in the Dominican Republic. There are two of us reporting – I'm Stephanie Hanes, a print reporter; looking over my shoulder at the screen is Steve Sapienza, a video journalist. We've collaborated before with the Pulitzer Center.