Migration detains 2,352 foreigners; deporta 1,787 to Haiti
Migration detains 2,352 foreigners; deporta 1,787 to Haiti during the first weeks of May
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More than 10 thousand foreigners from seven countries were deported and not admitted by the DGM
The statistical data correspond to the month of April.
The Directorate General of Migration (DGM) reported that during the month of April, 10,809 foreigners were deported and not admitted , that they were in an irregular situation in the Dominican Republic or did not meet the requirements established in Law 285-04 .
According to the statistical report of the DGM ,聽 聽of the 10 thousand 809 foreigners, 5 thousand 609 were deported to their countries of origin, while another 5 thousand 200 were not admitted when trying to enter the country by air, sea and land .
According to the institution led by Lieutenant General 庐 (ERD) M谩ximo William Mu帽oz Delgado , the deported foreigners were from Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, the United States, Haiti, Italy and Venezuela.聽
The majority of deported foreigners, who had irregular immigration status, were detained during interdiction operations carried out during the last weeks in different provinces of the country.
In relation to other migratory movements, the DGM report reveals that through the national airports during the referred month, there were 639 thousand 445 entries and 674 thousand 416 departures, mainly by the Punta Cana International Airport the air terminal that concentrated the largest number of passengers, followed by the airports Las Am茅ricas in Santo Domingo, Cibao in Santiago , Gregorio Luper贸n in Puerto Plata, La Romana , El Catey de Saman谩, Joaqu铆n Balaguer in Santo Domingo and Mar铆a Montes in Barahona.
Regarding the migratory flow through the land border, the institution reports聽 聽that 30 thousand 470 entries and 24 thousand 737 exits were registered , with the Jiman铆 border crossing having the highest flow, followed by Dajab贸n, El铆as Pi帽a and Pedernales.
As聽 聽regards the seaway, the statistics indicate 97 000 445 entries and 92 000 237 outlets, mainly by tourist ports Maimon in Puerto Plata and La Romana , which are the most visited by cruise traffic.
The statistical report of the DGM also indicates the voluntary return of 94 foreigners and the reception of 161 Dominicans after serving a sentence in 16 countries for the commission of different crimes.
Similarly, the report of the institution indicated the issuance of 2 079 residences of different categories to foreigners from 62 countries .
Over the past years many foreigners residing in DR, have opted to get residency or even citizenship and those of us who have been here for some time, know of many that have now got their residency having seen the signs of change before and after the PNRE Plan (the amnesty decree allowing illegal long term residenst to obtain a residency status).
With over 2000 a month now getting or refreshing residency it is clear that there is a reducing pool of illegal long overstayers which is shrinking all the time.
The softly softly approach advising embassies of the limitations on overstay and foreign government travel advice too seems to be working without the need to panic Westeners聽 by extending the significant daily round ups to them as well as Haitians Venezuelans, some other South Americans, Asians, East Europeans and those from Caribbean nations as well as those that work illegally.
It is pleasing to see expat.com takes a clear approach recommending residency or a visa status to new expats whilst advising others of the current state of play and potential pitfalls regarding overstay.
The Chinese are certainly up to something in the DR. The Chinese love to take over a countries port system, which often ends up baldy for that country, but that is a different topic than than these normal monthly roundups by immigration.
These monthly roundups are mainly Haitians, Venezuelans with some other countries thrown in
Whilst the monthly rate of denied entry and deportation creeps ever upward, there seems no change in the main objective of cutting back on illegal immigration by Haitians. They list immigrants from Belgium, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, United States, France, Russia and Uzbekistan were included in deportations, but probably in very small numbers.
A most interesting statistic is the increase in numbers of residencies given out, 3,321 in May.
El informe de la DGM se帽ala un incremento en las deportaciones durante el referido mes.
They are increasing the entry denials and deportations.
The other nationalities who got deported long with Haitians are listed:
Los extranjeros deportados eran procedentes de B茅lgica, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Estados Unidos, Francia, Hait铆, Rusia y Rep煤blica de Uzbekist谩n.
聽 聽
116 extranjeros
Very few in terms of the total and they were likely found working without residency or visa or other breach of immigration law other than overstay, but nevertheless a warning shot for any expat thinking of coming and working without residency or work permit....or indeed those expats who are hiding here in overstay with a criminal record from back home to serve.
And the numbers of residency issues in May has risen quite alot on a month by month basis and there are numerous so called gringos getting residency these days as the statistics posted on the DGM site confirm. Again an indication that the message of the benefits and needing residency getting understood and acted upon by many.
So as planner points out, there is relavence and food for thought to so called gringo expats, whether old, new, resident, non resident or at the planning stage in these monthly posted figures.....if you care to take notice.......which clearly PeteZZZ does not.
Gringo - is also derogatory and its meaning is聽 people from the USA.聽 Lets start using expats please.
Take the intensity down a notch.
It's not quite as simple as you make it sound...
30 days is legal limit for a visit (non-visa)... that's written on your entry stamp these days.
After that , when you are officially illegal, the view gets murkier...
Certainly, there is no problem leaving - just pay the overstay fee.
Driving on a foreign聽 license can be called into question.....
An overstaying/illegal visitor has virtually no rights under the law.
You can be denied anything - you are illegal
Not cut & dried..... not even close
I expect things will get clearer but not until after the next election.
The listed countries having persons deported or denied entry are Venezuela, Haiti, Czech Republic, USA, india and Italy. And of course the vast majority will be from Haiti.
The most interesting figure is perhaps the total number of entries by air at 597,127 which is slightly less than last June when the total number was 632,584 and that 5.6% drop overall appears to be largely to Punta Cana (a 12% drop to that airport) indicating perhaps the level of cancellations due to the bad publicity DR got from some American press. So much for the doom mongers. Facts speak louder than speculation..
The breakdown by nationality is yet to be posted by Banco Central.
One is the bad press and propaganda over fewer people from the US that died this year over the previous year. For some reason, the North American press really latched onto this.聽 If there are indeed 55,000 cancellations, that is $550,000 US in just tourist cards, not to mention what remains in country from the resorts, airlines and other services used by such tourists.聽
I suspect the loss in tourism to be temporary and Punta Cana will recover over the next several months.聽 The government publishes some data on this, so those who know where to find it will post it on various forums.
Second issue is Snowbirds and others that overstay 30 day tourist cards. Snowbirds are important to a couple of cities on the north coast and are not really on the radar when it comes to overall tourism in the country.聽 Those in Santo Domingo pay little attention to the north coast.聽 There does appear to be some movement on this with new data bases linking fingerprints, passports and the new passport stamp with a written in date showing clearly the time a tourist is in the DR legally.聽 I have waited for 16 years to see a snowbird visa implemented. We still have the exit fees...
Thirdly, as for expats,聽 we already live here and aren't likely to go anywhere because that news does not really affect us if we aren't working in a tourist related area. Expats without legal residency could face some issues depending upon new rules and how those rules are enforced.
$10 to enter --- $20 to leave
your $550K shoots up
55,000 cancellations does not mean 55,000 people.聽 It also does not mean they were all going to resorts.聽 The numbers could be much larger.聽 聽
I don't believe that expats and snowbirds have no effect on the economy here.聽 Many expats contribute large amounts of money to this country, much more than individual tourists.聽 Many snowbirds purchase property here, hire locals, spend gobs of money.聽
Don't you think that expats and snowbirds have any influence or connection with other people outside of the country that want to come to the island, business associates, friends, family members...consider the ripple effect.
Many of us have large groups of followers and social media access.
Everyone is an important contributor to the DR and all should be considered.
If you look at one expat or snowbird and compare them to one tourist vacationing for a week, of course the expat or snowbird for several months contributes more than that tourist. My point is that there are thousands of snowbirds and MILLIONS UPON MILLIONS of tourists.聽 The math is hugely on the side of the vast number of tourists as compared to the thousands snowbirds and that is where the government focuses. Not upon the tens of thousands of snowbirds, if even that many,聽 or several thousands of year round residents like myself.聽 I certainly don't see tens of thousands of snowbirds or or聽 expats here聽 on the north coast. More like a few thousand.聽 The census numbers might prove interesting on that point.
I have lived on the north coast since 2003 and I very well understand the lack of interest in infrastructure and enforcement of the rule of law on the north coast.聽 There is a reason it is called a "wild west" area of the country.聽 聽There is no way to justify a statement that snowbirds and expats contribute anything close to the vastly larger number of short term vacationers and cruise ship passengers.
I said on another posting that the cost of a plane ticket for November is $380 RT. It was stated the price is always lower during off season, but as someone who follows plane ticket prices, it has not been this low in years from my location.
Real or not, this matter is going to have an impact on tourism for the next year as people usually plan vacations 4-6 months out.
It will be interesting to see the reported tourists numbers. We all know the government doesn鈥檛 fudge numbers. 馃槃
In the first two months of 2019, Dominican Republic welcomed 604,977 tourists, an increase of 8 percent compared to this time last year. In that timeframe, 65 percent of those tourist arrivals came from North America, specifically the United States which continues to be a key market for Dominican Republic.
Hotel Announcements
In 2018, Dominican Republic saw a 6 percent growth in hotel rooms. The country added 4,365 total hotel rooms throughout various regions of the country totaling 80,256 overall hotel rooms. In addition to the flourishing additions, Dominican Republic鈥檚 hotel occupancy rate was an impressive 77 percent, a .5 percent increase from 2017.
The growth does not end there. ASONAHORES reported 65 projects are already approved for 2019 and Dominican Republic is slated to add 11 new properties between 2019 and 2022.
Air Arrivals
Punta Cana International Airport (PUJ) continues to be the main point of entry into Dominican Republic with a record breaking 3,921,351 tourists received in 2018, an increase of more than 277,000 travelers compared to 2017. This growth is followed by Santo Domingo鈥檚 Las Americas Airport (SDQ) with 1,374,777; Santiago鈥檚 Cibao International Airport (STI) with 628,170 and Puerto Plata鈥檚 Gregorio Luper贸n International Airport (POP) following closely with 429,029.
This growth is due in large part to Dominican Republic鈥檚 open-sky policy, allowing for a large influx of flights as well as new nonstop routes to and from the United States.
Cruise Arrivals
Throughout 2018 Dominican Republic welcomed a total of 1,357,200 passengers via its four cruise ports, an increase of more than 157,000 compared to 2017. The Amber Cove cruise port in Puerto Plata continues to be the country鈥檚 main point of entry for cruise arrivals.
Now try and explain how a few thousand snowbirds and few thousand expats stand up in their contributions to the economy compared聽 to those millions of tourists and cruisers?
And we can hope (sadly) that something else catches media attention!!!!
The drop in June on entries was expected and c 35k and most noted in Punta Cana.
DR is without doubt the best and best value tourist destination in the Caribbean to include Mexico, and as soon as people see the difference on offer, numbers will likely recover and grow. Investment continues to grow strongly and some hotels are doing remodelling at this time too. Security and general hotel management has been upgraded too as a result of the negativity.
The tourist body in the East thinks the situation will recover by next high season starting November:
Enjoy any discounts whilst you can!
My area has been close to dead for quite a few years.
freeperson wrote:State Department issued a level two (out of four) safety warning for the Dominican Republic in April 2019. The warning advises travelers exercise increased caution due to violent crime in the country, which include armed robbery, homicide and sexual assault.Jun 24, 2019
Level 2 Advisories (Exercise Increased Caution):
Albania
Algeria
Antarctica
The Bahamas
Bangladesh
Belize
Bosnia and Herzgovina
Brazil
Burma (Myanmar)
Cameroon
China
Colombia
Denmark
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
Eritrea
Ethiopia
France
Germany
Guinea
Guyana
India
Indonesia
Jamaica
Kenya
Kosovo
Maldives
Mexico
Morocco
Nepal
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Spain
Sri Lanka
Tanzania
Trinidad & Tobago
Tunisia
Turks and Caicos Islands
Uganda
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Zimbabwe
Restricted choice then.........the travel advisory level did not change by the way.
Stick to the tourist zones such as Punta Cana and you will be very safe
Expats聽 and longer stay - also pay the US 10,聽 contribute to rent,聽 buying food at the stores, restaurants,聽 electricity, cable, internet,聽 gasoline etc etc.聽 聽But the numbers are far far smaller.
Both would have an effect if they dried up. We see what happened on the north coast. I too moved her in 2003 and things were booming on the north coast. A few years later and it was a totally different story! Those were both longer stay and short term tourists.
Which comes first......聽 I just hope they keep coming!
DR tourism did not start with snowbirds or expats.聽 It started with people visiting on vacation.聽 Then it grew to people spending winters as snowbirds and some people migrated and decided to live here. Cabarete, for example, was "discovered" by some Canadians who visited, I think in the late 1960's or early 1970's and found it to be a good place for windsurfing.聽
Sosua was largely populated by Jews who were allowed to enter the country during World War II, but those expats did not last long and hardly a trace of them remains aside from a small Museum.聽 聽 Sosua is infamous now by the type of tourist it tends to attract lately, which is different mix than it was a few decades ago.聽 聽
Now to my real point.聽 The amount of money spent by snowbirds and expats is a drop in the bucket compared to the money the government in Santo Domingo gets from short term tourists and cruisers.聽 Stated another way, the money from snowbirds and expats is far less significant to the economy of the country.聽
Granted that to the small towns of Cabarete and Sosua,聽 tourism was (and is)聽 a significant factor. Some snowbirds still come.聽 Far fewer tourists visit Sosua and Cabarete then in the recent past. Far less than when I moved here in 2003. A few聽 more people are becoming full to most of the year expats in Sosua and Cabarete.聽 But those numbers are still rather small.聽 The towns of Sosua and Cabarete are largely ignored by the federal government in Santo Domingo because they really don't matter much in the overall economy of the country.
One family didn't leave - and I think many stayed.
All were high up the social ladder - educated people
One family started a dairy farm....
it became Sosua Dairies
They sold it a few years ago for $250 Million
Not bad.... 1940 or so..... 70-75 yrs work
1/4 Billion.....
By small I mean an assessed number in the order of 80/90,000 expats of all nationalities other than Haitian and many of them now have residency, etc..
Anglophiles definitely seem to soley think of themselves rather than all the other nationalities despite likely representing less than 20% of expats living here excluding Haitians. The mix of tourists and expats in tourist zones where a small percentage of the country's population live perhaps deceives their true numbers. (the population of the municipality of Sosua which includes Cabarete is about 51,000 and Punta Cana about 100,000 Las Terrenas about 39,000)
The idea a majority of expats are here for tourism spin off is perhaps misconceived too. Tourism accounts for 9% of GDP.
What about all the other commerce in the country? There are Chinese in business everywhere in the country. There are numerous mining companies at work with many different nationalities. Then there is agriculture with foreigners here within the full supply chain. The duty free zone factories are in many cases operated by foreign companies. The ports, airport, refineries have foreigners at work. Don't forget senior management at the many large hotels are foreigners too. And diplomats are here in large number too. Construction has had a decent expat involvement too with specialist companies working here. And then we have Spanish literate entrepreneurs. I've probably missed some sectors too but we tend only to think as anglophiles imo.
And finally let's not forget the fastest growing group of expats here....retirees investing in real estate and residency.
I should add that inflows from Venezuela have also apprently been responsible for the decent growth in recent years through the fianancing of a large amount of apartment construction activity (in the papers today).
And when it comes to tourism, the average spend by non resident foreigners is reported as considerably less on average than by Dominicans and non resident Dominicans on vacation here....Central Bank figures. The large tourist population dilutes the daily spend of each to $136 in country. I can believe middle class Dominicans spend big having seen them when on vacation for the extended family.
Tourism is very important and protecting every sector is important. Winter and other short term visitors fill up beds and small hotels and guest houses and pose no long term immigration issues imo so should be accomodated with suitable short term visa solutions.
As for the remaining long term overstayers, perhaps we should question their value to the country if they can't or won't fulfil residency requirements. They could be considered a risk without undergoing all the financial, medical and police checks required of residency and work permits and lacking the repatriation insurance cover now required. They cannot legally work and if they do so take jobs from Domincians. They cannot drive legally with insurance cover after 30 days. They are now a smaller number and diminishing all the time compared to the numbers ten years ago.
The monthly numbers posted by DGM and then incorporated into Central Bank statistics have value and give us a snapshot of current migrationary control and changes, plus residency processing, and the tourism sector activity through airports.
And provokes discussion too.......
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