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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.

REVOLUTIONARY DISTURBANCES IN SANTO DOMINGO.

No. 202.]

(Continued from Foreign Relations, 1905.)
Minister Dawson to the Secretary of State.

[Extracts.]

AMERICAN LEGATION, Santo Domingo, January 2, 1906. SIR: Continuing the subject of my No. 199a of December 20, political conditions in this Republic, I have the honor to report that in pursuance of my efforts to avoid a breach between the cabinet on the one side and the president and the Jimenista authorities on the other, I sent a letter on December 21 to the American consular agent to Monte Christi. (Copy inclosed.) Mr. Petit is in constant and amicable relations with Governor Arias, and I hoped the information given in regard to the determination of the cabinet not to interfere with the status quo in Monte Christi might tend to restrain the governor from rash action.

On the evening of the 21st I received the following telegram from the commander of the U. S. S. Nashville, then at Puerto Plata :

AMERICAN MINISTER:

PUERTO PLATA, December 21, 1905.

Have received authentic information the vice-president coming here to remove forcibly present governor of Puerto Plata. He will resist defending constitutional government. Please communicate immediately with President.

CHAMBERS.

Early in the morning of the 22d I called on the minister of foreign affairs, who told me that the vice-president did not intend to go immediately to Puerto Plata, that no action looking to the removal of Governor Perez had been taken, and none would be, at least until the receipt of further advices as to his attitude. I also called on the President, who said that no government decree on the subject had been adopted, that he hoped that the vice-president would not attempt to expel Perez without legal authority, because Perez would surely resist in such a case. I asked him to use his influence with Perez to avoid any violence, and he said that he, as in the past, would do everything in his power to prevent disturbances and civil war. I thereupon sent the following telegram:

NASHVILLE, Puerto Plata:

SANTO DOMINGO, December 22, 1905.

Inform consul Government gives assurance to me Caceres has no intention forcibly to remove governor. Full letter has been forwarded to you from me on Seminole.

a Printed in Foreign Relations, 1905, p. 410.

DAWSON.

On the afternoon of the 23d I was informed by the minister of foreign affairs that Governor Perez had ordered the arrest of the Horacista, commandante de Puerto, who had resisted and been shot; that the Government had thereupon adopted a decree removing Perez, but would give him every opportunity to comply before proceeding forcibly to put it into effect.

I thereupon telegraphed you as follows:

SANTO DOMINGO, December 23, 1905.

The Dominican Government informs me governor of Puerto Plata since this morning barricaded in citadel and arresting Horacistas, causing general alarm. The Dominican Government thereupon named his successor; resistance feared. The Dominican Government intends act with caution and legally.

DAWSON.

This bad news was confirmed early the next morning by the following telegram from the consul at Puerto Plata :

PUERTO PLATA, December 23, 1905.

AMERICAN MINISTER, Santo Domingo: Captain of Port Miguel Ramirez was shot and wounded at noon resisting order of arrest from governor. Government position apparently strong. ticipate further trouble.

which was followed shortly by this:

AMERICAN CONSUL, Santo Domingo:

An

HANDLEY.

PUERTO PLATA, December 23, 1905.

Unless President will direct governor to comply with order of minister interior to vacate in favor of Cocco, trouble will ensue. Can you advise President to send order?

HANDLEY.

I sent for the minister of foreign affairs and asked him if the decree removing Perez had been adopted. He answered in the affirmative, saying that not only had the official order signed by the minister of interior been telegraphed, but that Morales himself had also telegraphed over his own signature. He added that no doubt Perez was urging Morales to break with the cabinet and that, hoping to get personal and secret orders to ignore the official telegrams, he might believe that the President's signature had been placed to the telegram without his consent. I thereupon showed the minister the messages I had received from the consul and told him I proposed, in the interest of peace, at Puerto Plata to transmit to the consul a copy of any telegram which President Morales might inform me he had already sent, and to grant Perez temporary asylum if he should want it. The latter measure would, of course, tend to facilitate the peaceful transfer of the governorship, and the minister said that he and the President would be pleased if I should take it.

Accordingly I addressed a note to President Morales asking him to be kind enough to send me a copy of the telegram, if, in fact, he had sent one.

Later in the afternoon I received the copy in question and thereupon telegraphed the consul as follows:

AMERICAN CONSUL, Puerto Plata:

SANTO DOMINGO, December 24, 1905.

President informs me he sent following telegram: "“Gobernador.

á Manuel Cocco conforme telegramma anterior. Morales."

Entregue

If Perez wishes asylum you may give it. Government will not object. Keep me informed.

DAWSON.

Except the copy of his telegram I received that afternoon no message either written or by telephone from the President, and had no reason to think that he had changed his mind since my interview with him two days before. Indeed I since learn that he had spent most of the afternoon of the 24th in amicable conversation with Ministers Tejera and Velasquez.

At 7 o'clock that evening he left the city alone, walked out 2 miles where 25 or 30 young men assembled on the pretext of a Christmas eve "sancoche or supper were awaiting him. Only three of his bodyguard met him on the outside, and his most intimate political and personal friends, such as ex-Minister Sanchez and Pichardo, knew nothing of his intention.

Morales and his party seized some government cavalry horses from a pasture near our legation and about 8 or 9 o'clock rode west, arriving at the Jaina River, 10 miles distant, about 11. There they stopped for the night and were quickly joined by Rimaldo and Cesario Pimentel, two famous Jimenista jefes, who live in that neighborhood and can raise a considerable body of followers at a moment's notice.

The news of Morales's departure became known in town about 10 o'clock, and immediately the whole city was in an uproar. Early next morning a hundred or so government troops went in pursuit, and news soon came that fighting was going on this side of the Jaina.

I thereupon telegraphed you as follows:

SANTO DOMINGO, December 25, 1905. President left city suddenly and secretly last night. Government force pursuing him; general disturbances likely.

DAWSON.

The minister and the governor informed me that I had better remove my family into the city since my house is situated on the road along which the night scouting parties of both sides would advance. Accordingly I and the other residents of the Guibia suburb brought our families into the city.

There was a great deal of firing along the line of the Jaina that night, but the Morales people seem to have confined their efforts to holding the Government forces back.

On the afternoon of the 25th the minister of foreign affairs sent a circular note to all foreign representatives, inclosing a resolution of the cabinet (translations herewith) calling the vice-president to the capital to take charge of the Presidency temporarily during the absence of the President.

I thereupon telegraphed you as follows:

SANTO DOMINGO, December 26, 1905.

Dominican minister for foreign affairs notifies diplomatic corps that President having clandestinely abandoned capital leaving Government without acting head cabinet has called vice-president to take charge pending temporary failure of President to exercise his functions. See article forty-six Dominican constitution. Send instructions. City quiet. Cabinet exercising functions without interruption. President reported at Jaina among revolutionists; fighting there reported. New governor peacefully installed Puerto Plata.

DAWSON.

and answered the minister's note saying that I would ask for instructions from my Government. (Copy inclosed.)

The chargé d'affaires of France and Spain and the consuls of Germany and England asked me how I had answered the note, and I understand that their answers are practically identical with mine. The Haitian minister takes the position that without instructions he is justified in recognizing that the presidency became temporarily vacant and that the vice-president is legally exercising its functions.

It seemed to me, however, that there existed no immediate necessity for foreign representatives to express themselves in regard to what is primarily a point of Dominican constitutional law, i. e., whether Morales or Caceres is at this moment the legal head of the Government. The cabinet formerly named by President Morales is still in possession and exercising their functions. The only power given the President by the Dominican constitution is that of naming and removing the cabinet ministers. Once named they are the executive, and until they are removed or attempted to be removed by either Morales or Caceres, or are expelled from the capital and government offices, the question of who has the right to remove them is largely academic.

In the meantime Perez, finding that public opinion in Puerto Plata was against him in his intention to resist the installation of the new governor, had given up. On the evening of the 24th, after the President had left, but before I knew of his departure, I received the following telegram from the United States naval officer in command at Puerto Plata :

SCORPION, Santo Domingo:

PUERTO PLATA, December 24, 1905.

Urgent: For American minister. Interior has appointed Manual Cocco, very popular, as governor; is satisfied present governor desires to attack constitutional authority, but having positive direct order from the President to resist vice-president and not to give up, he can not vacate without battle. If you can persuade the President to issue positive order, governor will obey gladly.

CHAMBERS.

On the morning of the 26th came the following telegram from Consul Handley:

AMERICAN MINISTER, Santo Domingo:
Cocco in charge Gobernación.
Caceres arrive to-day.

PUERTO PLATA, December 26, 1905.

Perez sailed for Turks Island yesterday.

HANDLEY.

Perez did in fact sail for Turks Island, but immediately left there for Monte Christi, accompanied by ex-Vice-President Eugenio Deschamps, Gen. Joaquin Barba, and other Jimenista exiles.

In the afternoon I was handed by a person unknown to me a letter from President Morales, of which the following is a translation: SANTO DOMINGO, December 24, 1905.

Mr. T. C. DAWSON,

Minister of the United States, City. DISTINGUISHED SIR: The brutal insults to the constitution and my dignity as President of the Republic have forced me to absent myself from this city with the purpose of reestablishing the rule of law. As soon as I reach an important center of population I shall constitute the capital and remove the cabinet that is personally hostile to me.

I salute you,

MORALES L., President of the Republic.

To this I answered.

AMERICAN LEGATION,

Señor CARLOS F. MORALES, L., etc.

SANTO DOMINGO, December 26, 1905.

DEAR SIR AND FRIEND: I am in receipt of your personal letter of the 24th instant in regard to your intention to absent yourself from this capital, an intention which I am informed you have since carried into effect.

I will telegraph its contents to Washington and ask for instructions.
Yours, most respectfully,

(Signed)

I thereupon telegraphed you as follows:

T. C. DAWSON.

SANTO DOMINGO, December 27, 1905. Have received letter of President dated the 24th, saying that he is about to absent himself from capital in order to reestablish legal procedure, and later on will declare another city temporary capital, and will then name a new cabinet. He is reported to be 15 miles west, fighting. Troops sent by cabinet. American citizens interior alarmed, fearing that landing American seamen would be followed by violence to themselves.

DAWSON.

On midnight of the 26th I received the following telegram:

PUERTO PLATA, December 26, 1905.

AMERICAN MINISTER, Santo Domingo: Your cable forwarded. Caceres sent commission Monte Christi on Dubuque to confer with Rodriguez.

And on the 28th following:

HANDLEY.

PUERTO PLATA, December 28, 1905.

AMERICAN MINISTER, Santo Domingo:

Commission to Monte Christi failure. Rodriguez concentrating forces Guayubin, Horacistas, Santiago, and Navarrete. Perez arrived Monte Christi.

I thereupon telegraphed you as follows:

HANDLEY.

SANTO DOMINGO, December 28, 1905. Jimenistas advancing from Monte Christi against Santiago. The President still fighting near Jaina. His force small. City quiet, but apprehensive.

DAWSON.

On the 29th the U. S. S. Dubuque arrived here from Monte Christi, bringing me a copy of Governor Arias's proclamation, which I inclose for your information, with the translation thereof.

The same day the minister of foreign affairs informed me that the gunboat Independencia had left Macoris at 9 p. m. of the 26th with orders to carry $8,000 in cash, 60,000 rounds of rifle cartridges, 100 rifles, and some shells to the governors of Sanchez and Puerto Plata, but that her commander had disobeyed and taken his ship to Monte Christi, where he had placed himself under the orders of Governor Arias. The arrival of the Independencia at Monte Christi was confirmed by telegrams received by the commander of the Dubuque, and I accordingly telegraphed you as follows:

SEC. STATE, Washington:

SANTO DOMINGO, December 29, 1905.

Gunboat Independencia, sent by cabinet to Sanchez with munitions, has deserted and gone to Monte Christi. Will probably bring expedition against Macoris or other point. Whereabouts of the President unknown. The vicepresident arrives here to-day.

French chargé d'affaires offers, if agreeable to the American Government, to send Martinique for war ship to aid in protecting lives foreigners, which might be endangered by landing American seamen.

DAWSON.

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