BARAHONA, Dominican Republic, August 9, 2006... The Haitian Government ordered an
investigation into an international network which traffics with
Chinese, which supposedly had links with Haiti’s consulate in the
Dominican city of Barahona.
Haiti’s current chief of affairs in the consulate
in the southern Dominican territory, Pierre Laud Lagrenade was notified
by his country’s Foreign Ministry that visa services are suspended
until the probe concludes.
Dominican, Colombian, Panamanian and Chinese
citizens must obtain a tourist visa to travel to Haiti, with a single
entry costing US$85 in the Haitian consulates in Dominican territory,
according to sources.
The Haitian authorities were alerted of the case
by Haiti’s Trade Development Office in China, which points out that
China’s immigration services have requested support to determine the
routes by which its citizen obtained Haitian visas, without even
leaving their territory.
According to the news site Clave Digital, quoting
www.espacinsular.org, an international crime network obtained tourist
or businesses visas for Chinese citizens who then reached United States
or Canada using Haiti and Dominican Republic as a bridge, through
Barahona’s consulate. The passports were sent from China via private
courier, then given to a Chinese or Dominican local contact who
returned them to China.
Haiti’s consulates around the world are not
authorized to issue visas to citizens of communist China without prior
approval of the Haitian Foreign Ministry, as is part of Haiti’s
cooperation in the war against the trafficking of human beings.
The decision was taken at the end of June, 2002
and after the scandal of trafficking with Chinese in which the ex-
Dominican consul in the northern city of Cape Haitien, Radhamés Ramos
Garcia (nicknamed El Chino) was implicated and later convicted.
Data obtained in China and Port-au-Prince
revealed that the dealers paid US$3,000 for each visa. Investigators
are trying to determine the number of visas issued and who is directly
implied.
For now, Dominican Customs and Immigration
offices in Jimaní, Elías Piña and Pedernales have been alerted to the
fact that the "I.D." of employees signed by the ex-vice consul Harry
Joseph are not valid and has led them to believe that these include
inspectors "designated" by Joseph in several communities under that
consular jurisdiction.
The investigated files were supposedly issued
during Joseph’s second tenure without official endorsement, at least
not from Haiti’s Foreign Ministry and he becomes first consular
official dismissed from his functions by Rene Preval’s government. He
was implicated Last April in an unauthorized operation to contract 200
Haitian laborers and illegal trafficking, and denounced in the
www.espacinsular.org website.