UNCLAS PORT AU PRINCE 000324
SIPDIS
WHA/PPC FOR Puccetti
G/TIP/WHA FOR Eterno
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KWMN, KCRM, PHUM, ELAB, PREL, SMIG, ASEC
SUBJECT: Haiti: Anti-TIP Proposal for ESF Funds, FY 2006
REF: 05 State 221183
1. Please find a proposal submitted by the Pan American
Development Foundation (PADF) Haiti for anti-trafficking in
persons ESF funding for FY 2006. Post fully supports this
proposal as the submission best tailored to combat
trafficking in persons in Haiti. The proposal targets the
cross-border aspect of human trafficking into the Dominican
Republic and, if awarded, PADF Haiti will coordinate
activities with PADF Dominican Republic:
A. Title: Haiti/Dominican Republic Cross-Border Anti-
Trafficking Project
B. Name of Recipient Organization: Pan American
Development Foundation (PADF) Haiti and Dominican Republic
C. Project Duration: This proposal seeks funding for a 12-
month program of activities for a new program component of
the PADF Trafficking in Persons Project, already funded by
USAID/Haiti.
D. Project Description: The new PADF/TIP component
proposed aims to prevent trafficking between Haiti and the
Dominican Republic through legal migration, border
monitoring, public awareness, and victim rehabilitation.
Since 2003, PADF/TIP has carried out the following
program activities primarily in Haiti:
-- Advocacy, policy reform and legislation,
-- Prosecution of traffickers and enforcement of
legislation
-- Information and media campaign
-- Protection and rescue of trafficked persons.
During the same time frame, PADF implemented
another program to build a network of strong civil
society organizations throughout the cross-border
region. This program is entitled Fwonty Nou
-Nuestra Frontera, is financed by the USAID/PVC
office, and is in the third of its five year life
of project. The main program activities to build
civil society capacity and promote cross-border
cooperation are as follows:
-- Technical assistance and training to build
civil society capacity
-- Mitigating cross-border conflict by creating
bridges between Haitian and Dominican civil
society organizations
-- Creating new economic opportunities along the
border
The present proposal builds on the success of both
programs by creating a new TIP component focused
specifically on the prevention of cross-border
trafficking and victim abuse, including the
following activities:
-- Cross-Border Task Force and bi-national
advocacy for improved migration policies,
including legal migration as a tool for the
prevention of trafficking
-- Assessing and improving border monitoring by
creating a broad based and bi-national Border
Watch program for advocacy, prevention, and more
reliable data on border crossing and repatriation
-- Strengthening border-area civil society and
local government capacity to provide shelter and
improve victim care for repatriated and trafficked
Haitians, including children and sex workers
-- Border-area information and media campaign in
Spanish and Creole
These proposed activities will complement PADF
programs presently underway on both sides of the
border through Fwonty Nou-Nuestra Frontera and
other current PADF Haiti programs including the
following:
-- A network of local TIP Action and Monitoring
Committees,
-- TIP programs to improve law enforcement via
assistance to the national police Brigade for the
Protection of Minors (BPM) and the social welfare
institute (IBESR) of the Ministry of Social
Affairs,
-- A World Bank-funded Community Driven
Development Project (PRODEP) which works with
local civil society organizations and local
government to promote employment creation and
decentralization and
-- PADF support for local civil protection
committees and disaster preparedness (Haiti's
national Civil Protection Agency has recently
expressed interest in having PADF coordinate
support for civil protection committees throughout
the Haitian border area).
Given this organizational base, PADF is well
situated to promote policy advocacy from the
ground up, including advocacy for legal migration
and the monitoring and prevention of cross-border
trafficking. PADF will also leverage its special
relationship to the OAS in Haiti and the Dominican
Republic for technical assistance, expertise in
human rights and anti-trafficking, and training of
government personnel. Furthermore, during a
PADF/DR workshop on border trafficking priorities,
President Fernandez of the Dominican Republic
publicly asked PADF and the OAS for assistance in
monitoring Dominican repatriation of Haitians in
order to safeguard against human rights
violations.
New Program Component
Activities
1. Civil society border watch: border monitoring
and documentation of trafficking, human rights
abuses, and repatriation
The border watch program will include two types of
activities: (a) on the Haitian side of the border,
more systematic collection of data on trafficked
and deported persons including evidence of human
rights violations, geographic origins, social
profile, children separated from adult caretakers,
and conditions under which deportees were picked
up, detained, and transported; (b) on the
Dominican side of the border, observation of
deportation by local civil society organizations,
including round-ups and detention in areas away
from the border, and information sharing with
border-area shelters and local authorities on the
Haitian side regarding the impending arrival of
deportees.
The border watch program will set the stage for
improved monitoring of human rights abuses in the
process of round-up and repatriation of
undocumented Haitian migrants in keeping with
concerns expressed by President Fernandez in June
2005. It will include establishment of cross-
border civil society partnerships with
organizations such as the Red Cross, cross-border
communications, and arrangements for notifying
local Haitian authorities of the arrival of
deportees. The development of an improved
database will facilitate advocacy on behalf of
legal migration arrangements and human rights, and
will support concerns and policy recommendations
of the Cross-Border Task Force.
The project will conduct interviews with deportees
and other returned migrants through border-area
shelters, local human rights monitoring
committees, and border mayor offices that provide
services to migrants returning to Haiti. This
project activity will require assessment of any
current efforts to collect such data including the
Groupe d'Appui au Rapatris et Refugis (GARR) and
grassroots human rights committees on the Haitian
side of the border, and Solidaridad Fronteriza on
the Dominican side. The project will examine the
feasibility of introducing a standardized data
collection instrument along with sustainable
arrangements for holding and interpreting the
data.
Data findings and reports will be made available
to the Cross-Border Task Force and other
interested parties including local monitoring
committees and mayoral offices involved in
collecting the data at the front lines of deportee
entry into Haiti. The primary purpose of this
activity is to develop a more reliable base of
information rather than relying on hearsay to
inform program planning and advocacy.
2. Cross-border public awareness campaign: anti
trafficking messages, know-your- rights, referral
to shelters and protection services for women and
children
A media campaign in Spanish and Creole will
discourage illegal migration and trafficking,
promote respect for human rights including humane
treatment of deportees, promote legal migration,
discourage cross-border recruitment of unpaid
child servants, and promote respect for the rights
of children regardless of nationality. The media
campaign will include radio spots, pamphlets,
billboards, and a video documentary.
3. Cross-Border Task Force: workshops and
grassroots development of policy recommendations
to prevent trafficking and promote humane
migration policies
This activity will build on the Fwontye
Nou/Nuestra Frontera method of grassroots
workshops and cross-border civil society exchanges
as undertaken with considerable success in 2005.
This will specifically address migration policy
and related border issues, including trafficking.
It will integrate representatives of other sectors
together with community-based organizations,
including university, church, media, and human
rights groups. Workshop participants will include
current and former Haitian migrants and Dominican
employers of Haitian migrants.
PADF, together with the OAS, will spearhead the
creation of a Cross-Border Task Force. This
activity will also recruit bi-national specialists
in law and public policy to link grassroots
concerns with the legal framework and public
policies of Haiti and the Dominican Republic as
well as international conventions and
international law. The bi-national task force
will participate in workshops and prepare a
document summarizing grassroots concerns and
policy recommendations. This culminating text
will serve as a tool for advocacy with both
national governments including the Commission
Mixte Haitiano-Dominicaine (established in 1996),
to promote legal migration and prevent
trafficking.
4. Victim Services: Expansion of border area
temporary shelter capacity and victim care
services including rehabilitation and
reintegration
The project will strengthen NGO rescue and shelter
services operating in border towns on both sides
of the border. This priority focuses on high
volume border crossings such as
Ouanaminthe/Dajabon, Beladre/Elias Pina,
Malpasse/Jimani, Anse Pitre/Pedernales, and
d
other critical points of cross-border trafficking.
These are also primary deportation zones for
Haitians rounded up by Dominican authorities,
including trafficked children and children
separated from adult caretakers.
This activity will assist Haitian border-area
mayors to provide shelter for deportees, and refer
trafficked or deported children to more
specialized rescue and rehabilitation service
providers. This activity will include some
material assistance to mayor's offices including
beds. Work with the network of border-area
shelters will also facilitate collection of data
on deportees as noted earlier.
5. Training of border-area authorities: police,
social workers, and local government officials
including mayors and representatives of communal
sectional councils (CASEC).
This component will be funded primarily out of the
current PADF/TIP project and prospective follow-on
funding from the USAID/Haiti Mission. Training
sessions will be held in the four border areas
noted above. Training will include human rights,
monitoring procedures, and data collection on
deportees and other returning migrants. Special
sessions will be held for police officers in
border areas, including techniques for
interviewing and dealing with children. Training
will include cross-border contact between
authorities on both sides of the border to promote
collaboration on repatriation and border
monitoring, and greater awareness of bi-national
issues and laws.
In the Dominican Republic, the project will follow
up on a 2005 PADF/OAS seminar on human rights that
included representatives of the Dominican
military, police, and Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
New training opportunities may open up if the
Dominican government implements publicly stated
plans to create a new border patrol. The project
will also assess training needs with a view to the
publicly stated request by President Fernandez for
assistance in monitoring human rights and the
border, including repatriation.
E. Justification: The overall problem addressed by
the PADF/TIP program is trafficking in persons in
two major sectors that include the exploitation
and trafficking of children: (1) abuse and
trafficking of children as domestic servants in
Haiti, and (2) cross-border trafficking of
Haitians, including women, child laborers, and sex
workers in the neighboring Dominican Republic.
The present proposal targets the second objective,
cross-border trafficking. The following text
describes the cross-border context and synthesizes
the defining issues in cross-border trafficking
between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
The Border
The dilemma of Haitian migration is the most
notable feature of the border is the flow of
illegal Haitian migrants across the border to work
in the Dominican Republic. The underlying factor
in this labor migration is the acute poverty of
Haiti, particularly by comparison to the much
better economic conditions in the Dominican
Republic. In short, there is high demand for
cheap labor in the Dominican Labor, and there is a
large supply of underemployed Haitian laborers
readily available to meet the demand. The flood
of Haitian laborers into the Dominican Republic
has resulted in a polarizing social dilemma.
Dominican officials as well as ordinary citizens
are fearful of Dominican vulnerability to an
uncontrolled Haitian "invasion," and undocumented
Haitian workers enjoy few or no legal rights in
the Dominican Republic and are subject to abuse.
Consequently, much of the pro-Haitian human rights
advocacy in the Dominican Republic has an anti-
Dominican tone, and well-informed debate over this
increasingly volatile social dilemma is difficult
to achieve. Furthermore, efforts to confront
these polarizing migration issues do not generally
take into account many positive experiences of
numerous Haitians and Dominicans who live in close
proximity to each other along the border.
Haitians in the Dominican Republic: No reliable
statistics exist on the number of Haitians
currently residing in the DR. The vast majority
of them are undocumented. The minimal number is
500,000 although some informed estimates have
posited closer to a million. Given an overall
population of some 8 million Dominican citizens,
perhaps one out of every ten people is a Haitian.
Historical background of Haitian migration: The
destiny of Haitian migrants has been heavily
influenced by the withdrawal of Dominican and
Haitian governments from the organized supply of
Haitian labor to Dominican sugar fields. During
the era of government regulation of labor flow
under the Dominican governments of Trujillo and
Balaguer and the two Duvalier governments (Haiti),
there was little smuggling of workers. The
Haitian government recruited and transported young
men to the border. Workers spent several months
in Dominican cane fields and returned home at the
end of the harvest. There were human rights
abuses in this process; however, the cross-border
flow of temporary labor was closely regulated.
Emergence of smuggling: With the disappearance of
the Duvaliers, the regulated flow of labor ceased.
The entire sugar industry, from the mills to the
laborers, then resorted to cross-border human
smuggling and reliance on illegal workers.
Currently, the entire agricultural sector of the
Dominican Republic is heavily reliant on cheap
Haitian labor provided by undocumented workers.
Border dynamics
-- Local border area localities along the 380
kilometer Haiti-Dominican border are distinctly
different from regions more distant from the
border in both countries.
-- Cross-border movement between neighboring cross-
border localities.
-- The border also attracts strangers to the
border from literally all regions of Haiti,
primarily undocumented labor migrants seeking to
cross the border illegally.
-- There are many repeat travelers back and forth
across the border, including thousands of people
who are not from border areas, as well as border
residents.
-- In sparsely populated areas, uncontrolled
segments of the border are marked by lawlessness,
including armed robbery and cross-border
trafficking in stolen animals as well as
undocumented migrants.
-- Dominican medical services attract many Haitian
clients, including children, especially Haitians
from near-border areas.
-- The Dominican sugar industry relies almost
entirely on Haitians to cut the cane.
-- The construction industry also relies heavily
on Haitians for unskilled labor.
-- In most parts of the country, Haitians have
displaced Dominicans as paid laborers on the farms
of Dominican campesinos and agroindustrial
companies.
-- Border area farmers in Haiti also seek access
to farmland in Dominican border areas in the form
of rental or sharecropping arrangements.
-- Brunet (2001) as well as Bellande and Damais
(2002) report very high rates of informal or
illicit cross-border trade, especially for
agricultural products. About 25 percent of all
agricultural exports from both countries go to
each other.
Child labor. Cross-border guides and smugglers
arrange transportation and exploitative jobs for
Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. A
significant number of Haitian children work in the
streets of Santo Domingo, Santiago, and other
major towns of the Cibao area. Most are involved
in informal activities such as begging, shining
shoes, street vending, agricultural work, and, in
the cases of young girls, in domestic service and
prostitution. The Secretary of Labor of the
Dominican Republic has estimated that 25,000 to
30,000 Haitian children work in the Dominican
agriculture sector.
Evidence of trafficking and other abuse.
-- There is evidence of cross-border trafficking
of Haitian cane cutters. Though most cane cutters
are young adults who come explicitly to work in
cane fields, a subset of these young men is
composed of minors under the age of 18.
-- Undocumented migrants, including minors, are
sometimes required to pay kickbacks in exchange
for access to jobs as unskilled construction
workers in Dominican cities.
-- There are numerous reports of smugglers
dropping off undocumented Haitians, including
children, in remote areas where they are exposed
to the elements and risk death, instead of leading
them to work opportunities as promised.
-- There are also confirmed cases of children,
including restavk (a Creole word that refers to
Haitian children sent to live with other
households, usually other Haitian households, to
work as unpaid servants) brought from Haiti to
Santiago for the express purpose of organized
begging or other revenue generating activities
under the control of Haitian adults in Santiago.
-- There are numerous credible reports of "rent-a-
child" arrangements by which Haitian female
beggars in Santiago and Santo Domingo augment
their income by begging with young children in
their arms.
-- There are reports of young Haitian women on the
bateyes of Barahona locked in a room and forced
into prostitution services for Haitian cane
cutters as well as young Dominican women trapped
into prostitution in Port-au-Prince.
-- There is field evidence of smuggler recruitment
of young Haitian women including minors for the
sex trade in urban discothques and also for
placement of underage Haitian females as domestic
partners for rural Dominican men.
-- Aside from the sex trade, field interviews
indicate that teenage girls and young women
traveling with boukong (Creole term referring to
cross-border smugglers, or buscones in Spanish)
are vulnerable to sexual abuse or rape during
travel to the DR.
Priorities for Action
Legal migration for cane cutting. There is ample
cross-border smuggling unrelated to the sugar
industry; however, the heaviest volume of
smuggling is linked to cane fields. The best way
to undercut the demand for human smugglers would
be to legalize and regulate the flow of workers in
the cane. Legalization and regulation of the flow
would give unemployed Haitians access to seasonal
labor without the need to pay smugglers or dodge
Dominican soldiers. This goal should be broached
with the forthcoming Haitian government as well as
the Dominican government.
Explore temporary guest worker arrangements in the
construction industry. The Dominican
construction industry is as dependent on illegal
border crossings and smugglers as the sugar cane
industry. The option of issuing temporary guest
worker passes for the construction industry should
also be considered.
Repatriation. The process of Dominican
repatriation of Haitians tends to be abusive,
especially in the treatment of children. Haitians
are routinely rounded up and dropped off at the
border. Annual deportation is undoubtedly in the
thousands, including children. Haitians are picked
up wherever they happen to be with no opportunity
to gather their things, deal with valuables, or
look after their children, and children may be
abruptly separated from parents or other adult
caretakers. Repatriated Haitians and other
eyewitness reports also indicate that Dominican
guards may take money from deportees during the
repatriation process.
Shelter. Mayors in border communes sometimes
provide deportees or other returning migrants with
food, a place to sleep over night, and bus fare if
they can afford it. Some are labor migrants
abandoned by smugglers or migrants unable to find
work at assembly points for the sugar harvest.
PADF/TIP has provided assistance for such shelter
services in Beladre, but this border network
merits expansion.
Child servants. There is evidence of numerous
migrant children placed as unpaid child servants
in undocumented and marginal Haitian households in
the Dominican Republic. This is an underserved
sector worth targeting by Creole language media
campaigns within the Dominican Republic and by
civil society outreach at grassroots levels.
Tier Status
Haiti
In 2003, the U.S. Department of State Trafficking
in Persons Report classified Haiti in Tier 3 for
insufficient governmental efforts to prevent
trafficking in persons or to halt unlawful child
labor practices. This tier classification was
later upgraded to Tier 2 by a decision of
Secretary Powell. In 2004, in the wake of
political crisis and the fall of the Aristide
government, Haiti was not classified on the Tier
Watch List. The June 2005 Report placed Haiti on
the Tier 2 Watch List, noting that the Interim
Government of Haiti (IGOH) had made some effort to
address trafficking issues but that much more
needed to be done. The change in Tier status
coincides with PADF/TIP initiatives during this
period. The Report's findings and recommendations
also pointed to high priority areas for TIP
program initiatives.
Legal framework. The 2005 Report took note of
upcoming elections and the need to enact
comprehensive legislative reforms. Accordingly,
legislative reforms were identified as follows:
-- to protect children in the country from
trafficking and other abusers,
-- seek out opportunities to cooperate with the
Government of the Dominican Republic on cross-
border trafficking, and find ways to direct
resources to the Brigade for the Protection of
Minors (BPM) and the Social Welfare Ministry
(IBESR) so they may rescue and protect victims.
Prosecution. The June 2005 Report notes that the
country does not have a truly functioning judicial
system, that Haiti does not presently have the
capacity to adequately monitor its borders, and
that official corruption impedes anti-trafficking
efforts.
Protection. According to the 2005 Report, the
IGOH lacks the resources necessary to protect
trafficking victims. Furthermore, the IGOH lacks
the means to provide protection or assistance to
Haitians dropped at the border by Dominican
officials.
Prevention. The June 2005 Report states that the
IGOH lacks the resources for prevention campaigns;
however, the government did increase funding for
anti-trafficking efforts and other child
protection services in its 2005 budget.
Dominican Republic
The 2005 Trafficking in Persons Report places the
Dominican Republic on the Tier 2 Watch List due to
its failure in the past year to show evidence of
increased efforts to address trafficking. The
Report also notes that the Dominican Republic is a
source, transit, and destination country for men,
women, and children trafficked for the purposes of
sexual exploitation and forced labor, and cites
ILO estimates that 48,000 children are engaged in
child labor nationwide.
Prosecution. The TIP Report notes that anti-
trafficking law enforcement is limited, and
official corruption remains endemic and impedes
anti-trafficking efforts.
Protection. The 2005 Report states that there are
no shelters in the Dominican Republic that target
services to victims of trafficking, and that the
government lacks a comprehensive victim protection
policy. The Report notes that government control
of its border with Haiti is weak, and that
identification and responsible repatriation of
Haitian trafficking victims in the DR needs to be
improved. This finding reflects concerns
expressed by President Fernandez in June 2005 at a
workshop sponsored by the PADF Fwonty Nou-Nuestra
Frontera program.
Prevention. The TIP Report of 2005 takes note of
efforts to train officials in trafficking, and
public awareness campaigns; however, the Report
concludes that the Dominican government has not
implemented sustainable prevention campaigns.
F. Performance Indicators:
-- Improved monitoring, documentation, and more
reliable database on cross-border trafficking and
repatriation
-- Tool for bi-national advocacy for improved
migration policies including legal migration
-- More humane treatment of migrants picked up and
deported, including women and children
-- Heightened public awareness of trafficking
issues and victim services in border areas
-- Cross-Border Task Force and bi-national
advocacy on behalf of improved migration policies
including legal migration
-- Bi-national strategic planning to prevent
trafficking in both countries
-- Grassroots partnership with bi-national policy
experts, and advocacy at the highest levels of
government for improved border management and
immigration policies
-- Improved border services for victims, including
expanded shelter capacity
-- Increased awareness, protection, and local
capacity to provide improved services
-- Improved border services for victims, including
expanded shelter capacity and better treatment of
trafficked and repatriated Haitians
-- More humane treatment of deported children,
including those separated from adult caretakers
G. Evaluation Plan:
In the first month of operation, TIP program staff
will carry out a rapid needs assessment and
prepare a 12-month work plan for the cross-border
component in keeping with outputs summarized in
the above table of performance indicators. During
the sixth month, the project will review progress
in accomplishing goals and activities described in
the work plan, and will review the adequacy of
program response to needs identified in the
preliminary assessment.
In the final trimester of the cross-border the
project will use consultant support for
participatory evaluation of the cross-border
program along with all other TIP project
components to assess progress to date, identify
lessons learned, and propose follow-on activities
deemed necessary for Cross-Border and other TIP
program objectives. This evaluation will devote
particular attention to the evolution of the
political and policy environment following Haitian
elections projected for February, March, and April
2006, and establishment of a new government with a
functioning parliament, including parliamentary
commissions related to anti-trafficking and cross-
border issues. The fourth trimester evaluation
will identify priorities and prospective follow-on
activities in keeping with the policy environment
and the functioning of government and law
enforcement agencies linked to project goals.
H. Budget Breakout: The total budget requested for
The Cross-Border Anti-Trafficking Project is
$581,714. PADF will bring considerable
efficiencies to implementation through synergies
with existing long-term activities in the area
(detailed budget will be emailed separately in
excel spreadsheet). The resume below shows the
main line items.
Total Personnel and Fringes: 105,658 (18.2
percent)
Total Travel and perdiem: 36,000 (6.2 percent)
Total Project Support Costs: 95,820 (16.3 percent)
Total Project Activities: 265,000 (45.6 percent)
Total Direct Costs: 501,478 (86.2 percent)
NICRA: 80,236 (13.8 percent)
I. Cost-Sharing, Host Government Contribution:
PADF will also leverage its special relationship
to the OAS in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and
Washington for technical assistance, expertise in
human rights and anti-trafficking, and training of
government personnel. This will include
consultant support from the anti-trafficking unit
of OAS/Washington to assist the Brigade pour la
Protection des Mineurs. This assistance can be
leveraged to help train new BPM officers including
those slated for assignment to border areas.
There is also prospective grant support from
OAS/Washington to supplement PADF/TIP training for
the BPM and border authorities as described in the
present proposal for activity number 5, "Train
border area authorities."
In the Dominican Republic, the PADF/Fwonty Nou
-Nuestra Frontera Project collaborates closely
with OAS/DR, including joint financial support for
an OAS employee. Dr. Bertha Santoscoy, the OAS
Resident Representative in the Dominican Republic,
is also a well-known human rights lawyer. She is
available to assist the Cross-Border Anti-
Trafficking Project as a resource person.
Furthermore, PADF and OAS/DR will jointly
spearhead creation of the Cross-Border Task Force
(activity number 3 of this proposal), including
assistance in recruitment of bi-national
specialists in law and migration policy, and
recommendations for migration policy and strategic
planning for the border.
Other PADF Projects
As stated in the beginning, the present proposal,
the Haiti/Dominican Republic Cross-Border Anti-
Trafficking Project, is designed as a new PADF/TIP
component--the fifth component of an ongoing
program that also includes (1) advocacy, policy
reform, and legislation, (2) prosecution of
traffickers and enforcement legislation, (3)
information and media campaign, and (4) the
protection and rescue of trafficked persons.
Therefore, there is a considerable degree of
synergy as well as cost sharing in linking the new
Cross-Border Anti-Trafficking Project to the
ongoing PADF/TIP program.
The Haiti/Dominican Republic Cross-Border Anti-
Trafficking Project itself has five activity
areas. Four of these activity areas will be
funded primarily by the present proposal, whereas
the fifth activity area, "Training of border-area
authorities," will be funded primarily by the PADF-
TIP program under its present funding from the
USAID Mission.
The PADF/Fwonty Nou-Nuestra Frontera Project will
work closely with the Cross-Border Anti-
Trafficking Project, especially in the Dominican
Republic. This will include synergies and some
degree of cost sharing, including close proximity
via shared office space.
The PADF National Community Driven Development
Project (PRODEP) works closely with community groups
and local levels of government, including the South-
East department which adjoins the Dominican border.
The partnerships and the grassroots oriented
methodology of PRODEP in this area will facilitate
PADF/TIP and Cross-Border Anti-Trafficking
initiatives. PADF work with civil protection
committees also uses a methodology that links local
government with grassroots civil society
organizations. In view of the Cross-Border Anti-
Trafficking activities related to mayors and local
groups, the PRODEP and civil protection activities
tend to facilitate border-area anti-trafficking
activities.
I. Proposed Funding Mechanism: Same as current PADF
funding through USAID/Haiti.
J. Embassy POC: Dana Banks, Human Rights Officer,
Political Section, U.S. Embassy Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Phone: 011-509-222-0200, ext. 8270, Email: BanksD@state.gov
K. Other donors: None.
a. 1. Summary: One hundred three permanent voter
registration centers and 20 mobile centers with roughl
registration computers are open throughout Haiti, and
additional centers are scheduled to open within a few
Though the official tally of registered voters was 181
on June 23, on June 27, the Organization of American S
estimated that roughly 250,000 voters have registered.
However, some groups have started a campaign to dissua
Haitians from registering, and the Interim Government
Haiti still has not released decrees that will legitim
the elections. End Summary.