IOM HAITI BORDER MONITORING SITREP 03 rd MARCH 2016

Similar documents
IOM HAITI. BORDER MONITORING SITREP 11 th AUGUST Border Crossing Points (BCPs) along Haiti- Dominican Republic Border - IOM 2016

IOM HAITI. BORDER MONITORING SITREP 2 nd FEBRUARY Border Crossing Points (BCPs) along Haiti- Dominican Republic Border - IOM ,500 3,000

IOM HAITI. BORDER MONITORING SITREP 17 th NOVEMBER Border Crossing Points (BCPs) along Haiti- Dominican Republic Border - IOM 2016

IOM HAITI. BORDER MONITORING SITREP 30 th MARCH 2017 XXXV. Border Crossing Points (BCPs) along Haiti- Dominican Republic Border - IOM ,500

BORDER MONITORING SITREP

IOM HAITI BORDER MONITORING SITREP 15 th JANUARY 2016

IOM HAITI. Graph 1: Breakdown by Claimed Place of Birth. Graph 2: Movement Trends observed per week 4

BORDER MONITORING SITREP IOM HAITI TRACKING RETURNEES FROM THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC MAY 11, 2017

IOM HAITI. Movement Trends and type of returns by Border Crossing Points (BCPs) IOM 2015

IOM HAITI BORDER MONITORING SITREP 9 th OCTOBER 2015

BORDER MONITORING SITREP IOM HAITI

IOM HAITI. BORDER MONITORING SITREP 25th SEPTEMBER Returnees intended place of return by Department and number of returnees IOM 2015

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

RESIDENT / HUMANITARIAN COORDINATOR REPORT ON THE USE OF CERF FUNDS HAITI RAPID RESPONSE ECONOMIC - DISPLACEMENT/MIGRATION 2015

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

Undocumented Afghan Returns from Iran & Pakistan January to December 2015

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

Summary of IOM Statistics

Humanitarian bulletin Haiti. Bi-national crisis: one year later, the situation of returnees and deportees remains worrying. In this issue HIGHLIGHTS

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

Refugee and Migrant Children in Europe

Refugee and Migrant Children in Europe Accompanied, Unaccompanied and Separated

Context. 1 The Haitian-Dominican Committee of Concertation (CCHD) - a coordination platform which brings

The Government of the Netherlands, the Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan and UNHCR hereinafter referred to as the Parties,

RETURN OF UNDOCUMENTED AFGHANS

Unaccompanied minors in Ireland: Data, Policies and Practices. 27 November 2014 EMN Ireland-UNHCR Ireland Conference Emma Quinn

Council of the European Union Brussels, 5 April 2016 (OR. en)

CUMULATIVE REPORT IOM HAITI DISPLACEMENT IN HAITI MAY 2017

The Americas. UNHCR Global Appeal 2017 Update

The Multi-Cluster/Sector Initial Rapid Assessment - MIRA Summary of Key Findings and Recommendations

Intentions Survey Round II - National IDP Camps

Dadaab intentions and cross-border movement monitoring Dhobley district, Somalia and Dadaab Refugee Complex, Kenya, November 2018

PROFILING QUESTIONNAIRE

RWANDA. Overview. Working environment

Chapter 7: Timely and Durable Solutions

CUMULATIVE REPORT IOM HAITI DISPLACEMENT IN HAITI JUNE 2017

REVISED HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN JANUARY-DECEMBER 2018 SUMMARY JAN 2018 HAITI. Photo: Marco Dormino UN/MINUSTAH

AFGHANISTAN PROTECTION ASSESSMENT FORM

THAILAND. Overview. Operational highlights

NOR NORWAY BY THE GOVERNMENT OF NORWAY

THAILAND. Overview. Working environment. People of concern

LIBERIA. Overview. Operational highlights

International Organization for Migration Norway - Oslo

Afghanistan. Operational highlights. Persons of concern

CROSSING THE LINE OF CONTACT MONITORING REPORT

CROSSING THE LINE OF CONTACT MONITORING REPORT

United Republic of Tanzania

ENHANCING MIGRANT WELL-BEING UPON RETURN THROUGH AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO REINTEGRATION

COUNTRY OPERATIONS PLAN - IRAN

Trends in arrivals of new refugees, migrants and asylum-seekers to Serbia during the first four months of 2018

ALGERIA. Overview. Working environment

Zambia. Operational highlights. Persons of concern

MYANMAR KACHIN & NORTHERN SHAN STATES CAMP PROFILING ROUNDS 1-3 CROSS-CAMP AND TREND ANALYSIS REPORT

ICE ICELAND BY THE GOVERNMENT OF ICELAND

COM(2014) 382 final 2014/0202 (COD) (2015/C 012/11) Rapporteur: Grace ATTARD

Joint Way Forward on migration issues between Afghanistan and the EU

Site Assessment: Round 8

VOLUNTARY RETURN TO AFGHANISTAN

COUNTRY CHAPTER GER GERMANY BY THE GOVERNMENT OF GERMANY

Submission by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. for the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Compilation Report

COUNTRY CHAPTER CAN CANADA BY THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA

EUROPEAN REINTEGRATION NETWORK (ERIN) SPECIFIC ACTION PROGRAM. IRAQ - Kurdish Regional Governorates BRIEFING NOTE (also available in Sorani)

PROTECTION ASSESSMENT ON IDPS FROM JUBA

OPERATIONAL HIGHLIGHTS

DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS AND LOCATION

Yemen. Operational highlights. Persons of concern

Input to the Secretary General s report on the Global Compact Migration

ANALYSIS: FLOW MONITORING SURVEYS CHILD - SPECIFIC MODULE APRIL 2018

EUROPE / MEDITERRANEAN MIGRATION RESPONSE

AFGHANISTAN. Overview. Operational highlights

Delegations will find attached the compilation of replies to the questionnaire on overstayers in the EU, set out in 6920/15.

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER S PROGRAMME FAMILY PROTECTION ISSUES I. INTRODUCTION

Migrant Resource and Response Mechanisms

IOM s COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO COUNTER MIGRANT SMUGGLING

4 REGISTRATION IN EMERGENCIES

HUMANITARIAN PROTECTION OVERVIEW - WESTERN AFGHANISTAN

IOM s COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO COUNTER MIGRANT SMUGGLING

FLOW MONITORING OF VENEZUELAN MIGRATION ROUND 2

Somali refugees arriving at UNHCR s transit center in Ethiopia. Djibouti Eritrea Ethiopia Kenya Somalia Uganda. 58 UNHCR Global Appeal

DEFINITIONS USED Incoming individuals observed: This refers to individuals who arrive at a flow

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO

REPUBLIC OF LITHUANIA LAW ON REFUGEE STATUS. 4 July 1995 No. I-1004 Vilnius

IOM CHAD Influx from the Central African Republic (CAR)

Overview. Operational highlights. People of concern

LIBYA. Overview. Operational highlights. People of concern

Protection Considerations and Identification of Resettlement Needs

COUNTRY CHAPTER GER GERMANY BY THE GOVERNMENT OF GERMANY

Unaccompanied minors in Denmark - definition by authorities

Côte d Ivoire. Operational highlights. Persons of concern

325/1999 Coll. ACT on Asylum

ADVANCE UNEDITED VERSION

RETURN MIGRATION IN ALBANIA

IV CONCLUSIONS. Concerning general aspects:

THE VOICE OF THE COMMUNITIES OF LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN

. C O U N T R Y FIN C H A P T E FINLAND BY THE GOVERNMENT OF FINLAND

Transcription:

WK 0 WK 1 WK 2 WK 3 WK 4 WK 5 WK 6 WK 7 WK 8 WK 9 WK 10 WK 11 WK 12 WK 13 WK 14 WK 15 WK 16 WK 17 WK 18 WK 19 WK 20 WK 21 WK 22 WK 23 WK 24 WK 25 WK 26 WK 27 WK 28 WK 29 WK 30 WK 31 WK 32 WK 33 WK 34 WK 35 WK 36 WK 37 WK 38 WK 39 WK 40 Overview Most frequented Border Crossing Points (BCPs) by type Graph of return 1: Breakdown IOM 2016 by Claimed Place of Birth This document represents a summary snapshot of monitoring activities conducted by IOM and border monitoring partners at the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. The monitoring Dominican Republic was put in place following the movements observed at the border before and after the 17 th Unknown 16.2% June 2015 expiration of the registration 1.1% component of the National Plan for the Regularization of Foreigners (PNRE 1 Haitian in Spanish), established in the Dominican 82.7% Republic. Monitoring of border movements began as of the first week of June 2015. Up until the 16 th of June, figures are based on partial observations of border crossing points. The network was 100% operational as of July 2015. CUMULATIVE 2 HIGHLIGHTS 3 41,597 households representing 73,997 individuals have crossed the border into Haitian territory 34.5% were female while 65.5% were male 1,100 presumed unaccompanied minors were identified 3,113 households declared having been registered in the PNRE corresponding to 6,828 individuals 45,214 individuals declared having returned spontaneously to Haiti 12,423 individuals claim to have been deported 16,191 4 individuals were officially deported at the three official border crossing points of Ouanaminthe, Malpasse, and Belladères and have been voluntary registered. On February 25 th 2016, IOM Dominican Republic facilitated the Assisted Voluntary Returns and Reintegration (AVRR) of 169 individuals (73 households). 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Graph 2: Movement Trends observed per week 5 AVR DIRECTLY DETENTION CENTRE OFFICIAL 2015 2016 1 Plan Nacional de Regularización de los Extranjeros 2 Individuals are registered each time they enter Haiti. The figures reflected in this report include 404 individuals who have been registered twice. 3 All figures in this SitRep reflect information gathered on a voluntary basis from returnees, and therefore may not be representative of the totality of returns. 4 The figures of official deportations are as of 15 th August 2015. 5 The figures used in the graph are based on data entry already completed and do not reflect the total figures observed (average time for completion is 2 weeks). However, there has been a significant decrease in figures related to official deportations, as returnees are more and more refusing to register with the network.

Pregnant or Lactating Chronic Illness Elderly Person Single Headed Households Visual Disability Physical Disability Unaccompan ied Minors Sex Breakdown Of the 73,997 individuals monitored by the border monitoring network, 34.5% were female and 65.5% were male. Graph 3: Breakdown of returnee population by sex 65.5% 34.5% Documentation 30.2% (22,345 individuals) of the returnees interviewed reported having Haitian Documentation, while 2.4% (1,787 individuals) reported having Dominican documentation. A reported 67.4% (49,865 individuals) did not possess any type of documentation. Graph 6: Returnee documentation status Spontaneous Returns With ID 76.2% With No ID 53.8% Deported: Official 4.2% 30.4% Age Breakdown The majority of the returnee population reported being between the ages of 18-49 years old, with individuals from this age group representing 65.0% of the overall returning population. A reported 30.6% are aged 0-17 years old and 4.4% falls into the category 50 years and above. Graph 4 : Breakdown of returnees by sex and age No Data -10000-8000 -6000-4000 -2000 0 2000 4000 Types of vulnerabilities Among the persons crossing the border, the network encountered 1,100 cases of presumed unaccompanied minors (UAMs). After referral to the relevant government authorities (IBESR) and their partners (UNICEF), 502 of the potential caseload referred were identified as UAMs and the appropriate actions were taken to assist them: 331 were reunited with their parents 145 were reunited with other relatives 18 are still awaiting family reunification. (please refer to the UNICEF Flash Update on Bi-National situation - 15 December 2015) Graph 5: Most common vulnerabilities identified. 1,296 73 0 2,073 11 4 1,100 Deported: 19.6% 15.4% The most common ID document returnees claim to possess continues to be the Haitian Birth Certificate, corresponding to 70.8% of the individuals with documentation. The second most common document is the Haitian ID (CIN or NIF) which represents 20.8%. Graph 7: Types of documents Haitian Passport 0.9% DR Birth Certificate 5.7% DR Passport 0.3% DR ID 1.3% Haiti ID 20.8% Haitian Birth Certificate 70.8% Occupation The most common occupation within the DR held by returnees is agriculture (19,358 households), followed by construction (9,994 households) and commerce (4,564 households). declared occupations fall within transportation, hotel, maintenance, security, students, among others. Graph 8: Types of occupation 171 237 317 451 540 126 44 Agriculture Commerce 4,564 Agriculture 19,358 Construction Commerce Domestic Work Restaurant Transport Hotel Construction 9,994 Security Student Animal Husbandry

Entry on Haitian Territory Of all 73,997 individuals interviewed, 45,214 individuals declared having returned spontaneously to Haiti. While 12,423 individuals claimed to have been deported into Haitian territory by various DR authorities (Immigration, CESFRONT, Military etc.), 16,191 individuals have been officially deported by DR Immigration (DGM). 170 individuals were Assisted voluntary Returns (AVR) carried out by IOM (Dominican Republic) Police 505 Military 2,138 CESFRONT 1,915 Graph 9: Total returns by Authority Civilian 465 134 Destination and Intentions When questioned regarding their intended destination, the following three communes have been most commonly indicated by returnees: Cornillons/Grand Bois as indicated by 4,357 households Anse-à-Pitres as indicated by 2,673 households Fonds-Verettes as indicated by 2,318 households Graph 10: Intended Destination Immigration 23,457 Graph 11: Age and sex breakdown of individuals born in the DR No Data s -2500-2000 -1500-1000 -500 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 Family remaining in the Dominican Republic When asked about remaining family members in the DR, 46,352 individuals (7,755 claimed deportees, 29,005 spontaneous returnees and 9,486 officially deported individuals) have indicated still having family members remaining in the DR. Further questioning regarding the status of these remaining families has revealed that 75.2% are Haitians without visa, 13.9% are Haitians with visa and 6.3% are Dominican citizens or have a Resident status. Graph 12: Status of returnee s family members remaining in the DR Resident/ Citizen 6.3% 4.6% Status 0 With Friends With Family/Relatives Rent a house NO Data In a settlement/ca I have no where to go 96 1,143 3,412 65 1,935 268 810 2,375 413 841 80 989 2,156 7,302 6,416 15,682 30,014 OFFICIAL CLAIMED DEPORTED SPONTANEOUS RETURNS Irrespective of the type of returns, the trends observed during previous SitReps remain the same. The returnees have, most commonly, provided the following answers: Intention to stay with relatives (81.4%). Intention to rent a house (7.0%) Intention to stay with Friends (4.8%) Having nowhere to go (2.2%) Intention to go to into a settlement/camp (0.8%) Individuals born in the Dominican Republic Of all returnees, 5,599 households (corresponding to 22,304 individuals) have at least one member who was born in the DR. More specifically, this corresponds to a total of 11,978 individuals born in the DR, 7,199 of which were born before January 26 th 2010. Subsequently, 1,237 individuals were verified by UNHCR as being born in the DR before January 26 th 2010 and as such will fall within UNHCR s mandate. (please refer to the UNHCR Statistical Update - dated February 25 th 2016) With Visa 13.9% Registration in the PNRE Of the 41,597 households interviewed by the network, 3,113 households (representing 7.5% of the returnee population) declared having been registered in the Dominican PNRE. Of these 3,113 households, 87.6% returned spontaneously to Haiti, 10.8% claimed to have been deported and 1.5% has been officially deported into Haitian territory. Graph13: Registration in the PNRE by return status OFFICIAL 1.5% DIRECTLY 8.3% DETENTION CENTRE 2.5% SPONTANEOUS RETURNS 87.6%

OFFICIAL DEPORTATIONS: PROFILING A total of 16,191 persons (15,937 households) have been officially deported at the official border crossing points of Ouanaminthe, Malpasse and Belladères and have been voluntary registered. Most of these deportations were conducted by DR immigration authorities (DGM). The majority of returnees are individuals and not households/families. Table 1: Official Deportations per official BCPs Official BCPs Households Deported Individuals Deported Belladères 3,444 3,473 Malpasse 5,303 5,331 Ouanaminthe 7,190 7,387 Breakdown by gender and Age Of all the 16,191 individuals officially deported, 94.2% were male and 5.8% were female. The majority of the officially deported individuals have reported being between the ages of 18-49 years, individuals from this age group representing 91% of the deported population. A reported 6% are aged between 0-17 years old and a mere 1% falls into the 50 year plus category. The average age of officially deported individuals is 26.49 years old. Graph 15: Age breakdown by sex and age of officially deported individuals Vulnerabilities Assessed among Officially Deported Among the people officially deported, 681 were presumed unaccompanied minors (UAM). These presumed UAMs were referred to the relevant government authority (IBESR) and their partners for appropriated care and status determination. Graph 16: Most common vulnerabilities assessed among official deported individuals. -5000-4000 -3000-2000 -1000 0 1000 681 Deportation Procedures Of all official deportations, 15,978 have reportedly been carried out by the General Directory of Migration (DGM in Spanish), 168 by the CESFRONT and 45 by the military. Graph 17: Authority carrying out official deportations When questioned about the location from which they were deported, the respondents have indicated the following: 14,123 individuals apprehended in the street 1,174 were apprehended in their residence 820 were apprehended in their place of employment. Graph 18: Location where officially deported individuals were apprehended Public place 30 Prison 15 CESFRONT 168 Place of employment 820 Military 45 21 My residence 1,174 residence 8 Immigration 15,978 Family remaining in the Dominican Republic A reported 9,310 of officially deported individuals have indicated still having family members remaining in the DR. They have indicated the following: 7,293 have relatives remaining 942 have children (daughter/son) remaining in DR 799 have their spouse (husband/wife) still in DR Graph 19: Returnees family status in the DR Spouse 799 Relatives 7,293 In the streets 14,123 8 Pregnant or Lactating 126 Single Headed Households 3 Physical Disability Unaccompanied Minors Children(s) 942 None 6,881 Parents 276

WEEKLY REPORT: Border monitoring activities from 25 th February to 2 nd March 2016. This section presents an overview of border monitoring activities and movement trends observed during the week of February 17 th to February 24 th 2016. WEEKLY HIGHLIGHTS 1,597 6 individuals were observed crossing the border into Haitian territory this week, which is a slightly low average number this week the average number of individuals observed crossing into Haiti since July 2015 is 1,839.7 individuals. 56 presumed unaccompanied minors (UAMs) were identified during this week which constitutes an elevated average for UAMs this week, the average number of presumed UAMs identified since July 2015 being 27.2. These UAMs referred to the relevant authority for follow up; 19 of these presumed unaccompanied minors were officially deported into Haitian territory. 787 individuals declared having returned spontaneously to Haiti representing an low average number of spontaneous returnees the average of spontaneous returnees since July 2015 being 1,103 individuals 203 individuals claimed to have been deported into Haitian territory; this is considered a elevated average in the number of claimed deportations as the average of claimed deportees since July 2015 is 151.5 individuals Official deportations continue to be carried out at the official border crossing points of Ouanaminthe, Malpasse and Belladères; a reported 963 individuals were officially deported into Haitian territory this week of which 438 individuals accepted to be registered voluntarily by the enumerators at the various official BCPs. This constitutes a low average for this week considering that there has been an average of 540 individuals being officially deported into Haiti since August 2015. On February 25 th 2016, IOM Dominican Republic facilitated the Assisted Voluntary Returns and Reintegration (AVRR) of 169 individuals (73 households). The reintegration assistance in Haiti will be provided by les Sœurs St. Jean Evangélique. OBSERVED MOVEMENT TRENDS Movements this week (1,597returnees) compared to the previous week ( 2,127returnees) remain stable; Overall weekly deportations (Claimed Deportations 203; official deportations 438) are lower than spontaneous returns 787 individuals). Spontaneous returns continue to be mainly assessed in unofficial border crossing points. This week 120 Individuals interviewed at unofficial border crossing points have claimed being deported directly into Haitian territory, while 63 persons claimed to have spent time in a detention center before being forcefully returned to Haiti. Table 1: Summary of monitored movements for this week 7 Entry Status Number of Returnees Deported: 203 Deported: Official 438 Spontaneous Returns 787 Assisted Voluntary Return 169 Official Deportations This week, a total of 438 individuals officially deported were registered at the three border crossing points of Ouanaminthe, Malpasse and Belladères. Most of these deportations were carried out by the DR Immigration authorities (DGM). The majority of returnees are individuals rather than households/families. Indeed a total of 434 households, corresponding to 438 individuals deported this week were registered by enumerators present at the border. Table 2: Official Deportations per official BCPs this week Official BCPs Households Individuals Deported Deported Belladères 62 62 Malpasse 221 221 Ouanaminthe 151 155 Deportation: The act of a State in the exercise of its sovereignty in removing an alien from its territory to a certain place after refusal of admission or termination of permission to remain (Glossary on Migration, p 18, IOM) Spontaneous (migration) return: An individual or groups who initiate and proceeds with their migration plans without any outside assistance. (Glossary on Migration, p 62, IOM) Official Deportations: Government organized returns which are carried out at the official Border Crossing Points between the hours of 8:00 AM to 6:00 PM (border schedule). Before official deportations, relevant returnees receive an official notification regarding the impending deportation. Furthermore, information regarding the time and point of deportation are communicated to the Haitian authorities (Haitian Embassy/consulate). Official deportations are mostly carried out by the DR Immigration (DGM). Deportations: Any forceful return which does not follow the aforementioned guidelines. This report has been made possible through the funding support received from the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM) and the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). 6 The difference between the previous SitRep and the current one is higher because the data is based on date of entry into Haiti and not date of data entry into the database. 7 The figures represented in this table correspond to the individuals who accepted voluntarily to be registered between the period from Wednesday 24 th February to Wednesday 2 March 2016.