Submitted by crinadmin on
Summary: Of the 54,808 foreign students in Dominican schools, 33,000 are Haitian and 24,000 of those are undocumented.
[SANTO DOMINGO, 13 June 2012] - The Education Ministry and the Immigration Agency on Wednesday agreed to allow foreign children to enrol in school, even if they don’t meet the requirement of legally residing in the country. Immigration director Jose Ricardo Taveras didn’t specify whether the ban would be repealed.
The measure comes after pressure from various pro-Haitian rights organisation, including the Centro Bono, who called the ban on enrolment a violation of human rights and of several international conventions signed by Dominican Republic.
Nonetheless Taveras and Education minister Josefina Pimentel noted that accepting those students doesn’t mean their immigration status would be legalised. They also announced a new fund to help document 24,000 undocumented foreign students, at an average cost of RD$1,200 each.
Pimentel said of the 54,808 foreign students in Dominican schools, 33,000 are Haitian and 24,000 of those are undocumented.
The officials also announced an interagency strategy with the Foreign Affairs Ministry and the Central Electoral Board, to study the issue of the immigrants aimed at registering them in the latter’s Book of Foreigners.
Further Information:
- DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Authorities weigh blocking illegal immigrants from public schools (14 June 2012)
- DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: 16-year-old campaigning for children's right to registration wins international award (1 December 2011)
- DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Children of illegal immigrants denied nationality (31 March 2009)
- STATELESSNESS: Children's Right to Nationality (Open Society Justice Initiative, 4 February 2011)
- STATELESSNESS: Nationality Rights for All - A progress report and global survey on statelessness (Refugees International, March 2009)