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Dominican Govt: 24K Affected by Citizenship Ruling

Government officials announced Thursday that more than 24,000 people born in the Dominican Republic to foreigners have not been properly registered, meaning they could lose their citizenship under a recent Constitutional Court decision.

A soldier speaks from behind a cutout in the door of the Dominican Republic's embassy with a Haitian demonstrator protesting the countrys new law that denies citizenship to the children of Haitian migrants living in the DR.  (Photo: AP Photo/Dieu Nalio Chery, File)

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Government officials announced Thursday that more than 24,000 people born in the Dominican Republic to foreigners have not been properly registered, meaning they could lose their citizenship under a recent Constitutional Court decision.

The Electoral Council released its findings after spending eight days combing through 60,000 birth record ledgers, saying that human rights groups erred in estimating that the court decision would affect some 200,000 residents, many of whose families have lived in the country for decades.

"I believe these statistics dispel many myths and a lot of information that was not consistent with the truth," Electoral Council President Roberto Rosario said.

Rights groups criticized the council's figure, saying it deeply understates the potential impact.

The 24,392 people the government identified includes only those listed on the civil register, said Santiago Canton, director of Partners for Human Rights at the U.S.-based Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice & Human Rights. Missing are people who have never registered or have been prevented from doing so, he said.

"It is known that thousands more have been denied access to the civil registry in the first place," said Canton, former executive secretary of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

He also repeated earlier criticism of the ruling itself. "It doesn't matter whether you discriminate against 24,000 or 100,000, it is still a blatant case of discrimination and arbitrary conduct," he said.

Canton said the government should publicly recognize that the court decision is racist and that it violates international agreements.

Activists say most of those affected by the court ruling are the descendants of poor migrants who came to work in sugar cane fields from neighboring Haiti, a predominantly black nation that shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic.

Rosario said more than half of the 24,392 residents not properly registered are of Haitian descent.

Thursday's announcement comes after the Constitutional Court ruled in September that people born in the Dominican Republic to parents who were neither citizens nor legal residents are not automatically entitled to citizenship under the constitution adopted in 2010. The decision was retroactive, applying to anyone born after 1929.

Officials have said they would not deport or expel anyone just because they are not properly registered with the government.

"If they prove they have roots here, if they prove they were born in this country and have not violated any laws, their documents will be put in order," Rosario said.

The government says, however, that anyone who can't do that will be stripped of their Dominican birth certificate and identification card, known as a cedula, which is issued at age 18 and allows participation in public activities ranging from voting to holding a job.

The Electoral Council now has one year to review in detail each of the 24,392 cases. Officials have not yet set a deadline for those affected to prove their citizenship, which human rights activists say has become increasingly difficult because of government actions in recent years.

In 2007, the Electoral Council ordered the denial of citizenship documents to all children born to migrants living illegally in the Dominican Republic, and authorities confiscated the papers of people who already had their documents.

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