Miami Herald

‘It’s mind-boggling’ what happened to ex-U.S. soldier trying to get to Haiti

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

Retired U.S. Army Sergeant Major Guy Theus knows that trying to cross into Haiti from the Dominican Republic can be a chaotic venture as drivers, motorcycli­sts and pedestrian­s compete for passage through wrought-iron gates.

But what he was unaware of is that trying to cross the border on the island of Hispaniola, which the two nations share, could also leave him with a bruised right temple. A Dominican official — who assumed that because Theus is Black that he is also Haitian — could do anything to him and get away with it, Theus alleges.

Theus, 63, says he was physically assaulted Tuesday morning while trying to cross into northern Haiti from the Dominican town of Dajabón, where a request to see his passport at an immigratio­n and customs checkpoint turned into a verbal altercatio­n, then a punch to the face and a slap from a Dominican government employee working at the border. The incident happened in the presence of several people, including two Americans whom Theus was trying to help after they were reportedly told that U.S. citizens could not cross the border into Haiti.

On Wednesday, with the help of Mariot Noel from the Haitian consulate in Dajabón, Theus filed a legal complaint against the officer. Theus was given a 10 a.m. Tuesday court hearing, Noel said, explaining that because of his injuries the court gave Theus several days to recover before hearing the complaint.

Because he was told by both Dominican and U.S. Embassy officials that he was not allowed to cross into Haiti, Theus said he was forced to book a ticket to Miami and then fly to Cap-Haïtien in order to drive to the northeaste­rn border town of Ouanaminth­e, where his wife was waiting on him at the

time of the incident. Marie-Paule Dupiton said what has happened to her husband is “difficult to swallow.”

“It’s mind-boggling,” Dupiton said. “If a U.S. Army retired sergeant major of 34 years can be assaulted at the border, who else will not be?”

‘YOU JUST PUNCHED ME’

A New York pediatrici­an, Dupiton has been running a summer camp in Ouanaminth­e with her husband for the past eight years. Several years ago, the couple bought a condo in the Dominican city of Santiago, which is where Dupiton left her husband on Sunday when she crossed over into Haiti with the help of a pastor’s wife to prepare for his arrival with camp supplies.

Theus says he was at the customs office on the Dominican side of the border trying to get permission to cross Tuesday morning when the incident with the officer happened.

“He arrogantly told me, ‘Get the passport, don’t let me ask you again for the second time,’ ” Theus said, recalling the exchange between him and the Dominican officer, who spoke broken Haitian Creole.

After the two engaged in a brief argument, Theus said, things got physical.

“The guy then threw a punch, hitting my right temple and my eyes,” Theus said.

“It’s when I collected myself I realized the guy just punched me. I walked after him and said, ‘You just punched me.’ He turned around and then slapped me,” Theus added. After Theus walked into a building to ask to see a supervisor, the officer, Theus said, turned around again, grabbed the back of his pants and physically removed him.

Moments later, another officer approached Theus and the two other U.S. citizens whom he was with. When he handed over his passport, which had been in his car, Theus said the officer let out an expletive. It was an American passport, not Haitian.

“I guess he assumed I’m Haitian and he can do anything he wants to me,” Theus said of the first officer.

Dominican Foreign Minister Roberto Alvarez confirmed to the Miami Herald that there was “an incident” at the border where Theus “was handled improperly” and it is being investigat­ed. It is unclear, Alvarez said, if the accused is an immigratio­n

officer or works for another agency at the border, which has come under tighter restrictio­ns since armed gangs tried to overthrow Haiti’s government this year.

TENSIONS ALONG THE BORDER

Tensions along the border crossings are not unheard of and a State Department official confirmed the agency is “aware of reports of incidents involving U.S. citizens encounteri­ng challenges with Dominican officials at border crossings.”

The State Department

declined to go into details, citing privacy concerns. However, several Black U.S. Peace Corps volunteers were detained in the country this year.

In its 2023 report about the Dominican Republic, the State Department said there was “evidence of racial prejudice and discrimina­tion by the security forces and other government offices against persons of darker complexion, in particular Haitians, Dominicans of Haitian descent, or those perceived to be Haitian.”

In 2022, the State Department issued a travel warning for dark-skinned

U.S. citizens and those of African descent traveling to the Dominican Republic. Black travelers were warned that they could be detained due to their complexion and an increase in immigratio­n enforcemen­t actions against Haitians.

Theus, who contacted the Haitian consulate and U.S. Embassy about the altercatio­n, says he is in the process of filing a complaint against the officer. Late Tuesday, he was told he needed to see a government-approved physician to document his injuries before taking legal action.

The airspace between

Haiti and the Dominican Republic has been closed for several months, however, reports have been mixed about whether the land border is also closed. While some U.S. citizens have told the Herald they are not allowed to cross, others reported crossing without problems.

During a call with the U.S. Embassy in Santo Domingo to report what had happened, Theus said he was informed that U.S. citizens are not allowed to cross the border into Haiti. A spokespers­on for the State Department said no such directive exists.

However, Haiti is under a Level 4 Do Not Travel Warning. If U.S. citizens travel there — even to northern Haiti, which doesn’t have the gang problems plaguing Port-au-Prince — they do so at their own risk.

“We do not make specific requests of foreign government­s to limit the movement of U.S. citizens,” the spokespers­on said. “The U.S. Department of State has no higher priority than the safety and security of all U.S. citizens overseas, including working to ensure that they are treated fairly and equitably while traveling, regardless of their race, ethnicity and skin color.”

 ?? ?? Guy Theus
Guy Theus
 ?? JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com ?? Guy Theus’ wife, not pictured, was waiting for him in the border town of Ouanaminth­e, Haiti, when the incident happened on the Dominican side of the border.
JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Guy Theus’ wife, not pictured, was waiting for him in the border town of Ouanaminth­e, Haiti, when the incident happened on the Dominican side of the border.

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