Under a Haitian Moon
Fok ou konnen kote ou soti pou ou konnen kote ou prale.
You must know where you come from to know where you’re going.
Haitian Proverb
A
Little R & R
It’s
been a bit since you all last heard from us, largely because we ‘did a Europe’
and basically took off the month of August.
Well, not exactly, but it was pretty close.
One
benefit of life in the Foreign Service is that some posts allow for one, two or
three “R&R” trips (if you have the leave available), where airline tickets
and some other associated fees are paid for by the State Department. Given the relative difficulty of living in a
place, one might get a different number of R&Rs over the length of a
tour. Because Haiti is classified as one
of the more difficult places in which to serve, we get one R&R each of the
two years we are here.
We
had a wonderful time absorbing the silence, the clean fresh air, the company of
family and friends, and the sights, sounds and tastes of the northwoods for a week when
we rented a cabin on Twin Bear Lake near Iron River, Wisconsin. We returned to Minneapolis for a few days,
and then drove to Louisville, Kentucky to cheer on Tommy in his first-ever Iron
Man competition, which he completed (amazing!) with a time of 14 hours 44
minutes and 56 seconds (truly astonishing when one considers he never competed
in anything like it before; here he is crossing the finish line - http://youtu.be/nJzMtG1wC3Y ). We drove
back to Minneapolis for a few days again, then moved both Tommy and Sophie into
their respective dorms/apartments at Gustavus for the start of the school year,
which was rather more bitter than sweet, but c'est la vie. Of course this is all part of the normal
course of life, but that doesn’t mean I have to like it. All in all it was a fantastic respite from
the oppressive heat, humidity, poor quality air and crushing poverty of Haiti, and
long, long overdue after six straight months without leaving the island. We vowed never again to go that long without
a trip back the States…
Twin Bear Lake, Iron River, Wisconsin |
A bounty of Iron River blueberries with Sue, Morgan, Dylan, Sophie, Tommy & Kate |
Sophie & Snickers enjoying a quiet moment on Twin Bear Lake. |
All the Panettis and a few Hintons in Iron River, Wisconsin. |
Kate, Tommy & Cousin Tilly in Chicago. |
Tommy just after finishing the 112 mile bike ride and just after starting the marathon. |
This makes me smile. :) |
The
Song That Never Ends
So
once again the United States Congress did it’s darndest to panic the world by
shutting down the federal government and bringing the planet to the edge of
another financial catastrophe. Good
goin’ guys! Looking forward to the next
round just a few months from now…
Seriously,
you may have wondered if or how the shutdown affected us here in the Paris of
the Caribbean, and the answer is: it
didn’t. Well, not really anyway. A couple agencies had to furlough a few
employees, but in general all things moved ahead full-speed (as much as that
can happen in Haiti). Federal offices
that “provide for the national security, including the conduct of foreign
relations essential to the national security or the safety of life and
property” continued unabated around the world.
Embassy operations continued as normal here in Haiti, but like missions
around the world, some special programming and travel were put on hold. For example, a friend and I were to do a
radio show on day three of the shutdown, but this was postponed on the first
day. In addition, a Haitian colleague from
our Fraud Prevention Unit and I were going to head to the north of the country (to
the north coast town of Cap Haitien and the surrounding region) for a week this
October to spend five days meeting local officials and doing investigations,
but that too was put on hold.
Now
that the shutdown is over, life has returned to normal here, and we all
anxiously await what happens next come the new year.
A
Day in the Life
I’m
not sure if you knew this or not, but I actually have several different titles,
as do my colleagues. I’m not even 100%
certain which of them one might say is technically my “real” title; you know,
the one everyone can relate to and understand.
I am variously a Foreign Service Officer (huh??), a Vice Consul (double
huh??), a Second Secretary (seriously??), a Consular Officer (is that like a
Guidance Counselor?) and a diplomat (at least I’ve heard of that one!). In addition, I am an “FS-04” and hold the
military-equivalent rank of major. (How
‘bout them apples? However, that rank is
only used for protocol purposes, for example if I ever attend a really
important meeting or function and have to be placed in the right order, or not seated next to the wrong
person.) And if you’ve paid attention to
the news over the last few decades you’ve no doubt seen evidence of our work
doing stuff like trying to keep Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons; helping
negotiate the accords in Bosnia (the Dayton Accords), Northern Ireland (Good
Friday Accords) or Oslo (Israel and the Palestinians); helping write the NEW
START nuclear weapons treaty with Russia; or trying to get Syria to end its
civil war and eliminate its chemical weapons stockpiles. All in a day’s work, you know. But of course I do nothing quite so … well, exciting
or important. So what is it that I do
all day?
It
should be fairly clear by now that I spend the bulk of my days interviewing
people who want visas from me. And while
that might give a hint as to how I spend my time each day, it isn’t a complete
picture, and certainly doesn’t give any indication of what anyone else does in
the Embassy. My wide audience of readers is constantly
asking me for more (not really), so I give to you: A Day in the Life Inside Embassy
Port-au-Prince! No need to thank
me… J
In
a basic sense, I work in a fairly typical office building, it just so happens
to be a United States Embassy, protected by United States Marines, large walls,
and some pretty darn good security. Each
floor has pretty standard offices and cubicles for the 20 or so federal
agencies present in Haiti. I am in the
consulate, which as you might recall is kind of a separate place, sometimes
located within an embassy, sometimes not (typically only in larger countries
with secondary cities of decent size).
This consulate is inside the embassy, and is a good part of the whole
first floor. Because of what we do here
(among other things issue visas, which are highly valuable and secure
documents, much like bank notes or birth certificate paper), the consulate has
its own secure doors and guards and such, and not anyone can just waltz in when
they please. The inside of the consulate
is a bit like a large, open-concept office space with lots of cubicles, copiers
and filing cabinets, a few offices around the perimeter for the managers and
the boss, and more than 30 ‘windows’ (kind of like bank teller windows behind
bullet-proof glass) along one whole side where the interviews take place.
Applicants
for visas or Americans with appointments at the American Citizen Services (ACS)
unit come into the embassy compound through a secure entrance, leave phones and
other things with the guards, and proceed into an outside courtyard to wait for
their appointments. They enter the
actual consulate and are in a fairly standard waiting room (again a bit like a
bank), hang out in a line until their turn (those applying for non-immigrant
visas) or just sit and wait to be called to a window (immigrant visas).
I
typically arrive around 700 am (give or take about 10 minutes), and now of
course I’m accompanied to work by my best girl, who recently took a job as a
Consular Assistant. By the time we arrive in the consulate, some people are
already there firing up their computer, making coffee, getting started on the
work of the day. In the consulate alone
there are lots of people, like foreign service officers (FSOs), foreign service
nationals (FSNs, or Haitians who work for the US government), eligible family
members (EFMs like Kate), and a federal law enforcement officer who conducts
investigations for us. All told, there
are probably about 75 people just in the consulate (the majority of whom are
FSNs – about 50 all told).
The
days’ applicants for visas typically arrive at the embassy before 600 am for
their appointments. (Keep in mind that
very few people have private cars, public transportation is almost
non-existent, and if an applicant came from somewhere outside of Port-au-Prince
they may have spent several days on the road to get here.) Applicants for non-immigrant visas start
‘intake’ around 700 am where they are fingerprinted and their relevant
demographic data and photograph are entered into our computer systems. Officers begin interviewing them around 800
am, and typically five officers will interview 350 – 500 applicants by about
noon or one.
Immigrant
visa applicants have more firm appointments, and they begin intake roughly at
the same time, when they check in with the FSN staff and turn in any documents that
may have been missing from their file.
Then they wait until called for their interview with one of us. Officers start interviewing around 800 am,
and typically five officers will interview around 100 applicants by around noon
or one as well.
In
the IV unit we interview people who want to move to the US permanently, virtually
all of whom start life in America as LPRs (Legal Permanent Residents, or ‘green
card’ holders). It’s up to them whether
they pursue citizenship or not, and that can take some time. IV interviews are really based on two broad
principles: the relationship the applicant
has to the petitioner (who is always an American citizen or LPR), and the
necessary documents required to complete an application. (By the way, none of this is necessary in the
NIV unit, where the principle criterion is the applicant’s ties to Haiti, which
suggest they do not want to immigrate and will return once their trip is over.)
A
file for each applicant holds all the relevant documentation: their actual petition, passport, medical
report, financial support documents, sometimes a police report if they’ve lived
in another country for a year or more, a birth and / or death certificate, a
marriage and / or divorce certificate, and other supporting documentation like
family photographs, email exchanges, cell phone records and money transfers (to
name a few). Files then go through
extensive pre-interview preparation by our Haitian colleagues who look for
missing documents, flag items in need of further examination or questioning,
identify items that might indicate fraud, and generally make my life at the
window much, much easier. The days’
files are arranged, and applicants enter the consulate for their interview.
Interview
day for the applicants generally means seeing several people: Kate and the other EFMs take their
fingerprints, they talk to an FSN who prescreens any documents applicants may
have brought along to complete their file, and then they are interviewed by an
officer.
Keep
in mind as well that each file can be for multiple people; imagine not just a
single individual coming for their interview, but a family of five or six. Now consider a scenario I had recently, where
the American citizen petitioner was a sibling who petitioned for his two
siblings and their families here in Haiti. There were nine people altogether. Or a more extreme case, a sibling in the US
who petitioned for his four brothers and sisters and all their kids,
adding up to 21 people in four separate, but connected files. (Four of us split that one up, thank heavens!)
An
immigrant visa interview begins when officers take the file to their interview
window, spend time looking through all the documents checking items for hints
that lead to interview questions, looking over those things which have been
flagged by the FSNs, and generally getting into the mindset needed to start
questioning an applicant. Then we call
the applicant to our window and swear them in, using language similar to that which
you might see in courtroom dramas on TV:
“Do you swear or affirm that the information in your file and in our
conversation today is the truth?” They
sign their application, we sign their application, and we’re off to the races.
An
interview is a complex animal. Documents
are rarely the reason a person is permanently disqualified, so almost
everything hinges on the relationship.
However, those documents can provide clues to us and give us direction
for our questioning (and sometimes they are fraudulent). For example, consider the case of an
unmarried son or daughter of an American citizen. Quite often in Haiti these unmarried sons or
daughters are of child-bearing age themselves and have several children already
(who also may qualify to immigrate to the US either now or in the future, if
the applicant does immigrate). We ask
for the birth certificates of their children because Haitian birth documents
specify whether the parents were married or not when the child was born. Therefore, if an applicant is applying for
the ‘unmarried’ category but have any children whose birth certificates both
identify the applicant and say the child was born “legitime” as opposed to
“naturelle”, they are not qualified for the visa because Haitian law requires a
legal marriage in order to identify a newborn child as legitime. We spend quite a bit of time sleuthing to try
and suss out how an applicant might try to hide relevant details that
disqualify them, and if they have then we have to apply immigration law to
their case and refuse their application under the right section or sections of
the law. (Keep in mind that interviews
are all conducted in Creole, which I am now doing with varied levels of success.)
Now
imagine all the permutations that exist in a family, in a society. There are somewhere around 100 different
types of US immigrant visas available in order to cover all those variations
and types of applicants around the world.
Haiti is the sixth busiest IV post in the world (processing about 30,000
per year), which is amazing given the size of the mission. Most of our ‘business’ deals with about 20 of
those categories, and the following is a small sampling of some of the most
common that we see here in Haiti:
Immediate
relatives (no numerical limits)
IR1
– Spouse of a US citizen
IR2
– Child of a US citizen
IR5
– Parent of a US citizen
CR1
– Conditional spouse of a US citizen (married two years or less)
Family-sponsored,
first preference (no numerical limits)
F11
– Unmarried son or daughter of a US citizen (these folks are not legally
considered ‘children’ as a result of their age)
F12
– child of F11
Family-sponsored,
second preference (subject to numerical limits)
F21
– spouse of an LPR
F22
– child of an LPR
F23
– child of an F21 or F22
F24
– unmarried son or daughter of an LPR
F25
– child of an F24
Family-sponsored,
third preference
F31
– married son or daughter of a US citizen
F32
– spouse of F31
F33
– child of F31
Family
sponsored, fourth preference
F41
– sibling of a US citizen
F42
– spouse of an F41
F43
– child of an F41
An
odd immigrant visa that is really processed as a non-immigrant visa is a K1
visa, which is for a fiancé (and a K2 for the kids of a K1).
I
had a case recently for a K1 visa where the petitioner is a native-born
American engaged to be married to her Haitian fiancé. The fiancé had two children from an earlier
relationship, and both kids are K2s. We
required the birth certificates of the Haitian fiancé as well as those of the
two kids, and when I examined the fiancé’s birth certificate I noticed it had
been altered in three places to change the last name of the fiancé to match
that of the last name of the children.
The kid’s birth documents appeared legitimate, but if I was right, then
the Haitian fiancé may have altered his birth document in order to match the
last name of kids that aren’t biologically his, and if true, it might indicate
that he and the US citizen petitioner are involved in human trafficking (trying
to take kids to the US who are not theirs).
I have suggested the fiancé have a DNA test with the two children, and
if it shows they are his biological children then they may get their petition
approved if they can demonstrate that they are truly in a fiancé relationship. The
case is in review and so there hasn’t been a resolution yet, but this case
illustrates that this can be serious business.
We
interview people to the tune of about 5 an hour, or until the days’ applicants
have all been interviewed. We then have
lunch (there is a nice little cafeteria in the Embassy) and then have meetings
or work on special projects. We also
process immigrant visa files at our desks, for example after an interview we
may require the applicant to return with missing or additional documents or
suggest they have a DNA test (like the K1 case above), or we may suggest a
fraud investigation based on details uncovered in the interview. When that happens, the applicant may return
several weeks later with the necessary documents or the DNA test may be
complete, and then the file needs to be reviewed by an officer and a further
decision made. Embassy Port-au-Prince
business hours are 700 am – 330 pm, and we tend to leave work by about 400 pm.
So
there you have it, a day in the life of the consulate in Haiti. Officers in other sections (political,
economic, management or public diplomacy) or with different agencies (CDC,
USAID, USDA, the US Coast Guard, etc.) do vastly different work around the
city, out in the country and often work directly with business and government
leaders as opposed to the general public like we do.
Crazy
Story of the Day: The Major and the
Tell-Tale Heart
So
a colleague was driving near the embassy recently with his FSN driver when they
(surprise, surprise) ran into some crazy traffic on a Port-au-Prince back road. Suddenly a car came directly at theirs driving
the wrong way, and stopped immediately in front of their car totally blocking any
forward progress. His driver started a ‘conversation’
with the other driver using the speaker system that embassy car is equipped
with, trying to convince the other guy to get the heck out of the way. My friend was just frustrated with the whole
thing and opened the door to yell at the guy in English (not particularly helpful
here), and they then noticed the other guy holding a mayonnaise jar out the
driver-side window. Strange enough, but
then they noticed something odd about the jar.
The other driver yelled something back at the embassy driver, who then
just capitulated and let the other guy make his way past. My buddy asked what the other guy was up to,
and was told he held a human heart packed in ice in the jar and needed to get
to the hospital.
Seriously, you can’t
make this shit up.
Life Outside of Work
Now
you know the ins and outs of a day in the life of one Consular Officer at
Embassy Port-au-Prince, about which I am sure you are eternally grateful. A month ago Kate started as a Consular
Assistant at the Embassy, working in the same section as me, taking
fingerprints and processing DNA requests for applicants. We hosted a wine tasting party here in
September for about 40 people or so (the Ambassador even showed up!), conducted
by a local importer of wine and liquor.
There was a little Oktoberfest celebration held here at Canne a Sucre in
late September that, despite the rain, was a great success. Our good friend Andrea moved from the
consulate after a year to work her last year in the economic section, and she
had a great party to commemorate the move and just allow us to enjoy one
another’s company for an evening.
Yesterday we kicked off the new school year at a Catholic all-girls
school in the city by teaching some English to a group of bright and energetic
high school girls. And of course we
continue our association with the local SMDT orphanage, which continues to
provide us with a sense of fulfillment.
During
a recent visit to SMDT, we noted several major improvements to the building and
grounds. An electrician came and fixed
much of the open wiring we saw throughout the building and installed a small
generator so they can operate a few lights and fans in the evening. A new water pump was installed that allows
them to move water from the below-ground cistern to an above ground barrel,
making it easier to dispense water. One
tent was removed and four open-air classrooms were built, covered with tin roof
and complete with desks and blackboards.
A natural gas tank and line was installed and hooked up to at least one
of the two gas stovetops they have, helping to reduce their reliance on dirty,
forest destroying charcoal (a really serious problem here). All in all, Carlo is not only saying the
right things, but is taking proactive steps to improve the general living
conditions for the kids and his family.
A US Embassy grant has been approved to help build and install a playground
for the kids, and so things are really moving in the right direction.
Of
course this does not mean all is hunky dory at SMDT. The needs are still great, and the donations
sent from abroad are very, very welcome.
Thanks to all who have sent clothing and supplies – from the many
individual contributions to coordinated efforts from the likes of the Jefferson
High School Student Council and the Prior Lake Junior Optimists, all the
contributions have been well received and Carlo and his family are very
thankful for the assistance. In the
event you or an organization are interested, Carlo and his mom put together a
list of the most pressing needs at the moment, and if you’d like to contribute
any of the following, please let me know.
Pillows
Toothpaste
Tooth
brushes
Shampoo
and conditioner
Deodorant
Diapers
Body
sprays
Sanitary
pads
Underwear
/ boys boxers
Bras
Bath
towels
Kitchen
towels
Sandals
School
shoes
Body
lotions
Large
plastic buckets
Laundry
hampers
School
glue
Staplers
Any donations can be mailed via United States Postal Service to us at:
Dave & Kate Panetti
Unit 3400 Box 24
DPO - AA
34060
Ask at the Post Office for special rates to DPO / APO / FPO addresses.
Ask at the Post Office for special rates to DPO / APO / FPO addresses.
Three or four new open-air classrooms replaced an old donated tent. |
A new gas tank and line were installed. |
Kate and Boudneyson being goofy. |
Several doctors and nurses were visiting recently to give the kids pre-school check-ups. |
Some of the kids of SMDT saying goodbye to Sophie. |
Blame
it on the Rain
Several
weeks ago I had a medical appointment in south Florida and we were in need of a
short break, so we spent a perfect long weekend in Fort Lauderdale at a friend’s small
condo not far from the beach. Upon our return
to Haiti on Monday afternoon, the skies opened up and dropped several inches of
rain in a short period, which has real consequences in Haiti. (Fortunately so far, the much predicted hard
hurricane season hasn’t really developed into much, knock on wood.)
Here
is a link to a short video of what a little rain can do here. Enjoy!
So
you’ve wasted another perfectly good thirty minutes of your life that you aren’t
about to get back, and for that I thank you.
As we often say to one another during our daily struggles here in Haiti, “Lavi ap kontinye…” (Life goes on…). Generally speaking life is good for us, and we hope you can say the same.