Big
hopes on Preval
Caribbean
News
PORT-AU-PRINCE,
Haiti
Petroleumworld.com
02 19 06
Jubilant
Haitians danced in the streets to celebrate Rene Preval's victory
in a bitter election marred by fraud charges, calling on the
soft-spoken former agronomist to bring jobs and security to
their strife-torn nation.
It's
a tall order for Preval, who inherits a country where heavily
armed street gangs wage daily gunfights with U.N. peacekeepers
and seething mistrust divides the rich and poor.
Preval
remained shuttered in his sister's house in the capital of Port-au-Prince
late Thursday, hours after electoral and government officials
declared him the winner of the Feb. 7 elections. The decision,
following a days-long, roller-coaster vote count, eased the threat
of rioting by Preval's supporters.
"We
have won, we thank God and the population," Preval told the
Haitian Press Agency in his only public statement. "We will
now fight for Parliament."
Preval,
who led Haiti from 1996 to 2001, became the volatile country's
first elected president ever to finish his term. With the country
in worse shape than he left it five years ago, Preval has tried
to dampen expectations in his few public statements, saying his
government would not be able to immediately fix Haiti's problems.
"I
think that Mr. Preval has a very crucial role in inviting Haitians
to participate in the future of the country and to have an open
dialogue with all sectors," said U.N. special envoy to Haiti,
Juan Gabriel Valdes.
Hope
soared among Haitians who danced in the streets as word spread
that Preval, 63, won enough votes to avoid a runoff with second-place
finisher Leslie Manigat. His victory was cemented early Thursday
when elections officials decided to divide ballots that were left
blank among all candidates in proportion to the votes they'd received.
"I'm
so happy, because we have what we were looking for," said
Elvia Pressoir, 36, as she waited for Preval to appear outside
his sister's house. "With Preval, we'll have security, jobs
and life will get back to normal."
Exultant
Haitians waved ripped tree branches, which some say is a Voodoo
gesture to sweep away bad spirits.
"Now
we have hope," said Dabual Jean, a 24-year-old who sells
fruit on the street in the capital. "The country is upside
down. With Preval, hopefully we'll get on the right path."
But
that won't come easy in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western
Hemisphere with problems ranging from massive unemployment to
near-total rural deforestation. Most Haitians live on less than
$2 per day and have no running water or access to doctors.
Preval,
the son of a former government official, has vowed to crack down
on hardened criminals.
He
has been vague on whether he would welcome back Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, his former mentor who is in exile in South Africa. The
former slum priest fled Haiti as the United States withdrew support
for his government amid an armed rebellion in 2004 and accusations
that he was corrupt and had encouraged his supporters to attack
his opponents.
The
two former presidents have drifted apart in recent years.
The
Bush administration considers a possible return of Aristide —
the only Haitian leader, other than Preval, to be popularly elected
— to be a destabilizing factor, and has hinted that he should
remain in exile.
The
U.S. State Department congratulated Preval on his win Thursday,
saying Washington looked forward to working with his government.
Preval
had remained a hair short of an outright majority after 96 percent
of the vote was tabulated. Haitian officials then decided to divide
the 85,000 blank ballots cast among the candidates in proportion
to the percentage they had already achieved — giving Preval
just over 51 percent, said Michel Brunache, chief of Cabinet for
interim President Boniface Alexandre.
The
decision appears to have averted chaos in Haiti, where masses
of Preval supporters had protested in the streets, saying the
elections were being rigged to deny him a first-round victory.
The
allegations gained weight with the discovery of thousands of ballots
and other election material in a garbage dump.
Preval
had vowed to challenge the results if officials insisted on a
runoff.
Brunache
said redistributing the blank ballots was justified because the
interim Haitian government also suspected fraud.
Since
last Tuesday, the government was looking for a solution out of
the crisis," he told The Associated Press. "It was obvious
that the people had massively made a choice, and that we needed
to make sure that choice was respected."
U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the ballot redistribution was
"a reasonable way to attempt to resolve a conflict, an impasse
that could have led to conflict and violence."
But
Manigat accused election officials of breaking the rules to give
Preval a first-round victory.
"We
are not going to be sore losers but we are human beings,"
Manigat told reporters. He would not say if he would register
a formal complaint.
Caribbean
News
February
17, 2006
Copyright © 2006
Caribbean News.
All rights reserved
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