DR News

A follow-up report in NY’s NBC News observes that a man fired for teaching despite having a criminal record for sexual abuse in the United States could be back at the job soon. NBC says that 47-year old former priest Hadmels DeFrias in theory could seek another job at a private school in the Dominican Republic.
When he was fired, he was teaching English at the Colegio del Caribe in Punta Cana. NBC aired he had been banned from working with children in the United States. Authorities at the school said they did not know about De Frias’s criminal record when hiring him at the school. The school promptly fired the teacher as soon as the story broke on NBC News.
NBC interviewed Ministry of Education officers and was told that the case was closed against De Frias after he was fired from the school, but nothing impedes him from finding another job in the country where he does not have a criminal record.
Source: NBC News
May 14, 2019

German national Heinrich Christlieb, alias Sacha, has been captured. He had been sentenced to 20 years for child pornography. He was captured trying to flee via Haiti to Paris, France on Friday 10 May 2019. The arrest was carried out by the Public Prosecution Service, in coordination with the National Police and Interpol.
On 1 April 2019, 76-year-old Christlieb was convicted by a Puerto Plata court of child pornography in violation of Law number 53-07 on Technology Crimes and the Children Protection Law 136-03.
At the time of his arrest, he was allowed out on bail but an exit impediment was set, meaning he could not leave the country.
Because of his attempt to leave, the Puerto Plata Prosecutor’s office has asked for bail to be revoked and for him to go into preventive custody. Hoy reported that in addition to his attempts to avoid serving jail, it appears he had continued his child pornography business while out on bail. A new case will be heard against him.
Source: DR1, Hoy
May 14, 2019

According to a recently launched program by the United Nations Organization for Food and Agriculture (FAO), called 100 Territories Free of Poverty and Hunger (100-T), the Dominican Republic is one of the five priority countries in the region of Latin America and the Caribbean where there are strong differences between urban and rural areas and profound inequality in rural areas leading to hunger and poverty.
In the case of the Dominican Republic, the program will be focused along almost all of the frontier area, from Pedernales, Independencia, Elías Piña down to Bahoruco, then Azua, Barahona and El Seibo.
The other four priority countries are El Salvador, Guatemala, Colombia and Honduras.
The FAO will offer technical support and look for ways to improve public policies over a ten-year timeframe and identify the most vulnerable areas with the most poverty and hungry.
According to the FAO, despite advances in and growth of economies, there are rural areas with levels of poverty and extreme poverty of around 70% and an unacceptable level of chronic malnutrition, well below the national average.
Source: DR1, Listindiario
May 14, 2019

El Dia journalist Teresa Casado has denounced life threats received from Sidney Rafael Matias Perez (El Fuerte) who is accused of being the head of a drug trafficking ring that introduced 363 kilos of cocaine in 2017. Matías is being tried in court for this case.
El Dia has carried the story to protect their journalist in an intent to avoid that the Dominican Republic suffers the plight of Mexico, where thousands of journalists have lost their lives after reporting on drug traffickers. Listín Diario recently carried the story in defense of the journalist.
Matías had sent a message to Casado that a recent attempt to rob her house at gunpoint was just a warning.
Source: DR1, Eldia
May 14, 2019

Both Altice and Claro have sent a letter to the Dominican Telecommunications Institute (Indotel) requesting the government agency halt sales of Blue Max in the Dominican Republic. The service comes with the installation of the Amazon TV Fire Stick. It has been gaining customers in the Dominican Republic.
The two telecom giants call for the end to the illegal streaming services. Altice and Claro complain they pay a lot of money for their cable content. Blue Max and Fire Stick offer more competitive costs to view thousands of movies and now offer Dominican channels, too. The service costs RD$2,500 and provides access to 1,200 live channels.
Source: DR1, DiarioLibre
May 14, 2019

The population of the Dominican Republic is, demographically speaking, getting old fast. While still within the moderate phase of what is known as “demographic transition,” the falling birth rate along with improved health care are seen as responsible for the changes.
A recent study “Misión República Dominicana Envejece” (Mission the Dominican Republic is Aging) is part of the work done by the NTD Foundation and the Saldarriaga Concha Foundation, with support from the International Aging Institute of the United Nations. The report reveals that the Dominican Republic has already passed the initial phase of the demographic transition marked by a high birth rate. Now there are fewer births and people living longer, thus bringing about an increase in the adult population.
This represents several new challenges. In 1960, the average number of children born to Dominican women was 7.6. The statistics for the 2015-2020 period show that the national fertility rate is now at 2.29, and will decline to 2.1 for the 2025-2030 period and 1.8 for 2050-2055, below the so-called “replacement level fertility” (whereby population exactly replaces itself from one generation to the next, without migration).
This represents a shrinking population, much like Spain and most West European countries today. This projects to a much older population by mid-century. This reality poses many challenges for the Dominican Republic since it affects the socioeconomic wellbeing of the population. This includes everything from empty schoolrooms, to overcrowded health facilities to serve the aging population.
Source: DR1, DiarioLibre
May 14, 2019

Power supply has always been a problem in the Dominican Republic. Now, the executive vice president of the Dominican Public Electricity Corporation (CDEEE) Ruben Jimenez Bichara understands that the new Punta Catalina coal-fired central and new renewable projects will mean there will be a surplus to sell power to Haiti. The government of China has signed for a US$600 million loan to improve transmission lines.
As reported in Haiti Libre, Jiménez Bichara says the operation could be viable and profitable for both countries thanks to the agreement with international organizations for the rehabilitation of distribution networks in the main Haitian cities.
The Punta Catalina thermoelectric power plant is in its test phase has generated up to 385 megawatts of power, or around half its capacity. Nevertheless, Jimenez Bichara said that in the next four to five years, the power generation park in the Dominican Republic will need 700 megawatts to 900 more megawatts to meet the growing demand for energy and that a tender will be launched this effect.
Source: HaitiLibre
May 14, 2019

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The Dominican Republic is ranked 13th of 18 Latin American countries with the most debt, according to the World Bank. Only Panama, Peru, Chile, Guatemala and Paraguay are listed with lower debt percentage. The Dominican Republic is listed by the World Bank with a ratio of debt to GDP of 39.8%.
As reported in Diario Libre, Alessandro Legrottaglie, representative of the World Bank for the Dominican Republic, says that the debt level of the country “is one of the lowest in all the region.” He said the level is sustainable and “is not a problem for the Dominican Republic.”
The non-financial public sector debt was at 50.4% at the close of 2018, according to the Ministry of Hacienda (Treasury).
Diario Libre reports citing Ministry of Hacienda data that the servicing of the non-financial public sector debt was US$1.7 billion in the first quarter of 2019, or US$64 million more than for the same period last year.
As of 31 March 2019, the nonfinancial public sector (NFPS) external and domestic debt totaled US$32,733.0 million, according to the Ministry of Hacienda. This amount represents 39.0% of the estimated GDP.
According to the Ministry, 65.4% of the NFPS total debt corresponds to external debt, which presented a balance of US$21,417.8 million, while the remaining 34.6% corresponds to domestic debt, which totaled RD$570,847.7 million, equivalent to US$11,315.3 million at the exchange rate of RD$/US$=50.4493. These amounts represent 25.5% and 13.5% of the estimated GDP, respectively. Of the total domestic debt, US$2,623.7 million (3.1% of GDP) corresponds to intra-governmental bonds debt issued by the Central Government for the recapitalization of the Central Bank of the Dominican Republic. The intra-governmental debt is debt contracted by one government institution with another.
Legrottaglie made the statements when visiting the president of the Chamber of Deputies, Radhamés Camacho. The meetings coincided with the visit of Gabriel Goldschmidt, regional director for the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a sister organization to the World Bank. The World Bank has said it has US$500 million to lend for infrastructure and business projects in the Dominican Republic over the next four years.
Source: DR1, DiarioLibre
May 10, 2019