-
Van Dijk wants 'leader' Salah to stay at Liverpool
-
Zelensky in Berlin for high-stakes talks with US envoys, Europeans
-
Norway's Haugan powers to Val d'Isere slalom win
-
Hong Kong's oldest pro-democracy party announces dissolution
-
Gunmen kill 11 at Jewish festival on Australia's Bondi Beach
-
Zelensky says will seek US support to freeze front line at Berlin talks
-
Man who ploughed car into Liverpool football parade to be sentenced
-
Wonder bunker shot gives Schaper first European Tour victory
-
Chile far right eyes comeback as presidential vote opens
-
Gunmen kill 11 during Jewish event at Sydney's Bondi Beach
-
Robinson wins super-G, Vonn 4th as returning Shiffrin fails to finish
-
France's Bardella slams 'hypocrisy' over return of brothels
-
Ka Ying Rising hits sweet 16 as Romantic Warrior makes Hong Kong history
-
Shooting at Australia's Bondi Beach kills nine
-
Meillard leads after first run in Val d'Isere slalom
-
Thailand confirms first civilian killed in week of Cambodia fighting
-
England's Ashes hopes hang by a thread as 'Bazball' backfires
-
Police hunt gunman who killed two at US university
-
Wemby shines on comeback as Spurs stun Thunder, Knicks down Magic
-
McCullum admits England have been 'nowhere near' their best
-
Wembanyama stars as Spurs stun Thunder to reach NBA Cup final
-
Cambodia-Thailand border clashes enter second week
-
Gunman kills two, wounds nine at US university
-
Green says no complacency as Australia aim to seal Ashes in Adelaide
-
Islamabad puts drivers on notice as smog crisis worsens
-
Higa becomes first Japanese golfer to win Asian Tour order of merit
-
Tokyo-bound United plane returns to Washington after engine fails
-
Deja vu? Trump accused of economic denial and physical decline
-
Vietnam's 'Sorrow of War' sells out after viral controversy
-
China's smaller manufacturers look to catch the automation wave
-
For children of deported parents, lonely journeys to a new home
-
Hungary winemakers fear disease may 'wipe out' industry
-
Chile picks new president with far right candidate the front-runner
-
German defence giants battle over military spending ramp-up
-
Knicks reach NBA Cup final as Brunson sinks Magic
-
Quarterback Mendoza wins Heisman as US top college football player
-
Knicks reach NBA Cup final with 132-120 win over Magic
-
Campaigning starts in Central African Republic quadruple election
-
NBA Cavs center Mobley out 2-4 weeks with left calf strain
-
Tokyo-bound United flight returns to Dulles airport after engine fails
-
Hawks guard Young poised to resume practice after knee sprain
-
Salah back in Liverpool fold as Arsenal grab last-gasp win
-
Raphinha extends Barca's Liga lead, Atletico bounce back
-
Glasgow comeback upends Toulouse on Dupont's first start since injury
-
Two own goals save Arsenal blushes against Wolves
-
'Quality' teens Ndjantou, Mbaye star as PSG beat Metz to go top
-
Trump vows revenge after troops in Syria killed in alleged IS ambush
-
Maresca bemoans 'worst 48 hours at Chelsea' after lack of support
-
Teenage pair Ndjantou, Mbaye star as PSG beat Metz to go top
-
Drone strike in southern Sudan kills 6 UN peacekeepers
'Cruel measure': Dominican crackdown on Haitian hospitals
Still in pain from giving birth, a Haitian mother carrying her newborn was helped onto a migration services bus in the Dominican Republic, joining a family member who was arrested when he visited her in hospital.
Both were detained in a series of raids on Dominican health facilities, launched just over a week ago in the country's latest drive to eject undocumented migrants.
Since early 2024, more than 350,000 Haitians have been deported from the comparatively wealthy and stable Dominican Republic, shuttled across the 340-kilometer (211-mile) border with poverty and gang-violence riddled Haiti.
Dominican President Luis Abinader has championed a MAGA-style hard line on migration since first coming to power in 2020, with mass expulsions of Haitians and the construction of a wall that so far stretches across more than half the border.
Now, his administration has turned its attention to public hospitals, flushing out migrants who may have gone under the radar if it wasn't for the fact that they needed medical attention.
Arresting and deporting new mothers, "I don't like that.... women must be respected," Haitian Erony Auguste, 42, told AFP from the migration bus next to his sister-in-law who had recently given birth.
He claimed he was detained at the hospital despite having residency papers.
For William Charpentier, coordinator of the National Bureau for Migration and Refugees, a Dominican-based rights group, "mixing health with the issue of border control... is really a violation of human rights. It seems a very cruel measure."
Migrants seek the group's help daily, he told AFP, adding they are afraid to seek medical and maternal care for fear of being arrested and expelled from the country so many Haitians see as their only hope for a better life.
The measure "puts people, mainly women, at risk," said Charpentier.
Martin Ortiz Garcia of the Dominican National Health Service (SNS), confirmed the number of Haitians seeking hospital treatment has dropped.
- 'Everyone is afraid' -
Since 2010, the Dominican Republic does not grant birthright citizenship to children born in the country to undocumented migrants. A 2013 court ruling backdated the restriction to people born as far back as 1929.
Last year, Abinader's government deported over 276,200 Haitians and is on track to exceed that number with more than 86,400 deportations in the first quarter of 2025 alone.
"Of course, everyone is afraid. Sometimes even people with papers are arrested, even Dominicans are arrested if they leave home without papers," merchant Marie Casale, 63, told AFP in the capital Santo Domingo.
The Dominican Migration Service reported that on Day 1 of the hospital crackdown, 48 pregnant women, 39 new mothers, and 48 children were arrested and taken to a detention center for deportation.
At the center, 34-year-old Dominican national Santo Heredia waited, desperate for news of his wife, who is five months pregnant and was detained after a prenatal appointment.
His wife, said Heredia, was born in the Dominican Republic to Haitian parents, but has not been able to legalize her status in the country as they did not have enough money to file the paperwork.
The couple has another daughter, 4.
"She is alone, she has no money on her, she has no means of communicating with anyone," he told AFP. "This has me really tormented, honestly."
Last year, 36 out of every 100 births in Dominican hospitals were to Haitian women, according to Ortiz Garcia of the SNS.
Public hospitals require patients to provide identification, proof of employment and residence, and payment for services rendered.
But Ortiz Garcia insisted care is not denied to the undocumented.
"Illegals are treated in emergencies. If they need admission, they are admitted, and then after their medical event, they go through the migration protocol," he told AFP.
Many migrants from Haiti, a Creole- and French-speaking nation of some 11 million people of mainly African descent, are fleeing violent gangs that control about 85 percent of Port-au-Prince, the capital of the poorest country in the Americas.
Many in the Spanish-speaking Dominican Republic have turned on those of their neighbors who cross the border, accusing them of usurping Dominican jobs and resources.
A nationalist group calling itself "Ancient Dominican Order," has been campaigning against the "Haitianization" of the country and has urged the authorities to be "vigilant at all maternity wards."
On Sunday, two migration trucks with Haitians being deported were jeered at as they drove past a group of nationalist protesters shouting "Go back to your country" and "Out! Out!"
N.Mitchell--AT