Haitians seizing on legal path to US, rush to secure passport
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Hundreds of Haitians are flocking daily to the sole immigration office in Port-au-Prince, pressing against the bright blue gate as they strain to hear whether their name is called, hoping they will soon be chosen to live legally in the US under a new immigration plan.
The crowd has swelled ever since US President Joe Biden announced Thursday 5 that the US will accept 30,000 people a month from Haiti,
Nicaragua, Cuba and Venezuela. Those selected will be entitled to work for two years if they have eligible sponsors and pass background checks.
Those selected also will need a passport to travel, prompting the daily rush at the immigration office in Haiti’s capital.
“I’m here to leave Haiti, but I don’t want to risk my life via a boat,” said Jennyfer Leonard, a 30-year-old teacher, referring to how dozens of Haitian migrants smuggled aboard boats have died in recent attempts to reach the US.
“It would be nice to leave with my two kids for them to have a future, but I’m not willing to take the risk of them dying along the way,” she said.
So like hundreds of other Haitians in recent days, she opted for the recently announced legal route to the US instead of joining the tens of thousands of Haitians who have been intercepted at the US-Mexico border and deported.
On Wednesday, an aggressive crowd gathered at the immigration officeunder a brutal sun to apply for a passport, pick one up, renew an exisiting one or check on the status of an application.
“Is that my name? Is that my name?” people shouted every time a government official approached the gate and called on someone.
Garry Saint Paul, 25, was among those waiting to pick up his passport.
He previously worked in the neighbouring Dominican Republic as a janitor at a hotel until his contract and passport expired, forcing him back to Haiti where he remains unemployed.
“Haiti is under siege,” he said. “Gangs are taking over. Why not leave if you get the opportunity?”
Gangs control an estimated 60 per cent of Port-au-Prince, growing more powerful and violent since President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated at his private residence in July 2021. Reported kidnappings soared to more than 1,200 last year, double from the previous year, and 280 killings were reported in November, a monthly record, according to the UN.
“Life is really difficult,” said Leonard, the teacher, whose brother is a truck driver in Philadelphia and has agreed to be her financial sponsor.