itpaul bennett can't believe as he walks through the ruins of the houses. he lived in the dominican city of san diego. until the immigration police came, and smash everything to pieces. it is important i tell you this. if the police found out, he says, my life would be in danger. i have a wife and children i don't want to be killed here. those kinds of patrols are no rare occurrence. even those with papers face discrimination. of all the people i know, she says, dominicans are the biggest racists of the mall. we have the same blood. but they live in two worlds. early in the morning, we drive to the river on the border between haiti and the dominican republic. two countries on the single island of hispaniola. tens of thousands of haitians wait for the guards to open the gates. most want to go to the dominican market to shop or sell their goods. here, andto stay there are -- they are a thorn in the side of his countrymen. the relations between haitians and dominicans are marked by prejudice. racism and xenophobia. we think of ourselves as spanish and european