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| you are here: country programmes > Dominican Republic > political context | |||||||
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political contextThe Dominican Republic shares the island of Kiskeya, its Taino Indian name, with Haiti, a former French colony. After the Spanish colonisation of the island in 1492, followed by the Haitian occupation between 1822 and 1844, the Dominican Republic became a free state. But Haiti's occupation left a legacy of strained relations between the two countries. In August 2000, Hipólito Mejía took office as leader of the PRD and in 2004 ex-president Leonel Fernández was re-elected for a term lasting until 2008. In a country where the vast majority are Catholic, the Church plays an important role in public life in the Dominican Republic and is regarded as the country's moral backbone. The trade union movement and left-wing opposition groups - key players in the struggles against dictatorship in previous decades - have grown weaker. Instead, there is now a vibrant movement of strong and well-organised civil society groups, many of them grassroots, including neighbourhood organisations, women's groups and community associations. The Dominican Republic is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the Caribbean and remittances sent from Dominicans working abroad serve as one of the major sources of income for the economy, totalling an estimated US $2 billion per year. In May 2006, the congress elections violated the legal requirement for a quota of 33 per cent female representatives. Progressio is working with partners to lobby around the general law of participation, municipal organic law, penal code, procedural civil code and constitutional reform. At a local government level the PLD replaced the PRD, and again feminine quotas were not adhered to. The DR Central America Free Trade Agreement was signed in March 07. |
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