Descendants Of Haitians Finding It Harder To Get A Job
By AVA TURNQUEST
Tribune Chief Reporter
aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
THE government’s new immigration
policy has severely affected employment opportunities for persons of
Haitian descent, according to activist Louby Georges, who charged that
immigrants cannot fully comply with regulations because there is no
supporting legislation.
With
no legal framework three months after the policy was first introduced,
Mr Georges, host of the Kreyol Connection, said affected persons have
been fired and many remain in limbo because processing for the new
requirements, namely the belonger’s permit, has not yet started.
“The
Department of Immigration has an application form for something that
does not exist,” Mr Georges said, “there is no such thing as a
belonger’s permit.
“(Immigration
Director William) Pratt told me in his office, he said ‘well to be
honest the problem is that there is no legislation in place to support
the belonger’s permit, so we are hoping that in the next two weeks we
can present a bill to parliament and hoping it can be debated and then
passed, and then we can start reviewing applications, and then we can
start issuing (permits)’.”
“Persons
are being laid off and fired as a result of an announcement made first
on the floor of the House of Assembly from September 17, 2014. The
official opposition is afraid to speak up on the issue because they
don’t want to appear that they are siding with the Haitian community or
siding with the immigrants,” he said, “because Bahamians generally think
that Haitians or anything to do with Haitians is illegal or bad”.
Mr
Georges spoke out against the immigration policy at a lecture hosted by
the Bahamas Bar Association last week Thursday. He described the
experience of persons born in the Bahamas of Haitian descent as “20
times” more severe than challenges faced by ordinary citizens, and
charged that there were no measures to ensure that deported persons can
access constitutional rights once eligible.
On
November 1, 2014, the government introduced a wider immigration policy
that, among other things, required every non-Bahamian living in the
country to have a passport of their nationality with proof of their
status to live and work in The Bahamas.
On
Tuesday, Immigration Director William Pratt confirmed that the
department has received many calls from concerned employers over the
legal status of their employees under the new policy, adding that the
matter is adjudicated on a case-by-case basis.
Mr
Pratt stressed that it was not the department’s intention to jeopardise
employment and encouraged individuals to seek assistance with his
office for alternative options to secure a work permit.
“They
are entitled to have a work permit, of course,” he said. “If they’re
already employed and lived here all their lives, some employers have
contacted us about persons in that category. Some of these persons,
their citizenship is already before the board awaiting decision. So on a
case by case basis, we wouldn’t object.”
Mr
Pratt added: “Some people are already employed, Bahamians hired them
based on their birth certificates. They were born here, grew up here,
they were hired as Bahamians, but technically they are not. We will work
on a case by case basis on those issues,” he added, “most of those
persons their application is complete and they will be sworn in
shortly.”
Mr
Pratt explained that work and residency permits were always a
requirement but over the years enforcement was relaxed. Since the new
policy was introduced, he confirmed that “many employers” have called or
sent letters to the department.
He
added: “Those persons who are born in The Bahamas, according to our
Constitution their citizenship is not automatic. So because of the
constitutional law under the Immigration Act they require work and
residence permits but over the years we never really enforced it, to the
extent there were many persons who got jobs and were working and their
application (was still being processed), but going on forward now, once
this belonger’s permit comes on stream then it won’t be an issue because
persons would have it from infancy.”
The
resident belonger’s permit will give those born in The Bahamas who have
a right to apply for citizenship under the Constitution some form of
status while their application is pending, Foreign Affairs and
Immigration Minister Fred Mitchell said last December.
“It
is only issued to the children of Bahamians whose parents got their
citizenship pursuant to Article 3(2) of the Constitution and were born
outside The Bahamas, or to those children whose parents were lawfully in
The Bahamas and they were born here,” he said at the time.
February 05, 2015