Juliana Deguis
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Juliana Deguis Pierre (born April 1, 1984) is a Haitian-Dominican woman, who was the plaintiff in the landmark Dominican lawsuit against the civil registry authority of the Dominican Republic which in 2013 ruled that people born to illegal parents never had any right to the Dominican nationality by birth. Deguis applied to the Special Naturalization Amnesty (Law 169-14) and on August 1, 2014 she acquired the Dominican nationality.


Early years

Juliana Dequis Pierre was born in the Dominican Republic in the batey of Los Jovillos, municipality of
Yamasá Yamasá is a municipality (''municipio'') of the Monte Plata province in the Dominican Republic. It includes the municipal district (''distrito municipal'') of Los Botados. Yamasa is north of the capital city of Santo Domingo. The Rio Ozama, on ...
,
Monte Plata province Monte Plata () is an eastern Provinces of the Dominican Republic, province of the Dominican Republic, and also the name of its capital city. It was split from San Cristóbal (province), San Cristóbal in 1992. The province is bordered to the nor ...
, on 1 April 1984 to a Haitian father (Blanco Deguis) and mother (Marie Pierre) who settled in the
Dominican Republic The Dominican Republic ( ; es, República Dominicana, ) is a country located on the island of Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles archipelago of the Caribbean region. It occupies the eastern five-eighths of the island, which it shares wit ...
in the 1970s.


Struggle for Dominican nationality

In 2008, she went to the identification office with her
birth certificate A birth certificate is a vital record that documents the birth of a person. The term "birth certificate" can refer to either the original document certifying the circumstances of the birth or to a certified copy of or representation of the ensuin ...
to request a '' Cédula de Identidad y Electoral'', an Identification card. That ID card also serves as voter.s registration card. The officers seized her birth certificate and refused to issue her the requested document. The reason given for the rejection was that she had Haitian surnames. She appealed before the Civil and Commercial Court of the First Instance of the Judicial District of Monte Plata. She was rejected. The court justified rejecting her appeal on the basis that she did not supply the original version of her birth certificate but provided photocopies instead. She then appealed to the highest judicial instance in the Dominican Republic.
The Constitutional Court


The Sweeping Order of the Constitutional Court Against Her and Dominicans in her Category


The Constitutional Court
acknowledged that the proper venue for her appeal should have been the administrative grievances court but decided to hear the case anyway for the sake of , expediency". That court also denied her case but, in addition, recommended dramatic actions to be taken with regards to the status of all individuals who fit her profile in the country
The decision was issued in a 147-page document
which contained the two dissenting votes from the 13-member body. The decision can be summarized in 10 points as follows:Dominican Constitutional Court
"Referencia: Expediente núm. TC-05-2012-0077, relativo al recurso de revisión constitucional en materia de amparo incoado por la señora Juliana Dequis (o Deguis) Pierre, contra la Sentencia núm. 473/2012 dictada por la Cámara Civil, Comercial y de Trabajo del Juzgado de Primera Instancia del Distrito Judicial de Monte Plata, en fecha diez (10) de julio de dos mil doce (2012)."
" Tribunal Constitutional Republica Dominicana", Santo Domingo, 23 September 2013. Retrieved on November 18 2013
# The court accepted the form of the appeal # The court revoked the judgment of the Civil and Commercial Court of the First Instance of the Judicial District of Monte Plata but found against the plaintiff Juliana Dequis Pierre on the basis that she was born of aliens who were "in transit" in reference to Article 11.1 of the Constitution of 29 November 29, 1966 in force at the time of her birth # The court ordered the Central Electoral Junta to submit the birth certificate of Juliana to a competent court able to determine its validity or invalidity and to extend this measure to all similar cases # The court ordered the Immigration authorities to grant a temporary residence to Juliana until the implementation of the national plan for the regularization of illegal aliens in the Dominican Republic # The court directed the Central Electoral Junta to conduct a thorough audit of the civil records within a year starting from June 21, 1929, to expunge the civil records of people who are illegally recorded therein through April 18, 2007 and record these "aliens" onto another register; to develop within 90 days the national plan for the regularization of illegal aliens # The court exhorted the government to implement the plan for the regularization of illegal aliens # The court directed the Central Electoral Junta to turn the list of aliens illegally registered in the civil registry over to the Ministry of Interior and Police # The court ordered the notification of the decision to all the concerned parties # The court declared that the decision did not incur any unpaid expenditures # The court ordered the publication of the decision in the court's bulletin


Notes


External links


Ruling #0168–2013
Constitutional Court of the Dominican Republic
The Constitutional Court’s Ruling
Embassy of the Dominican Republic in the United States www.the-sentence.weebly.com


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Deguis, Juliana 1984 births Living people Dominican Republic people of Haitian descent Naturalized citizens of the Dominican Republic Haitians born in the Dominican Republic People from Monte Plata Province