Los Angeles Times

President of Haiti during quake

RENE PREVAL, 1943 - 2017

- By Evens Sanson Sanson writes for the Associated Press. news.obits@latimes.com

Rene Preval, the only democratic­ally elected president of Haiti to win and complete two terms, has died at age 74.

President Jovenel Moise confirmed Preval’s death in a tweet Friday.

“I learned with sadness the death of former President Rene Preval,” Moise said on his Twitter account. “I prostrate myself before the remains of this worthy son of Haiti.”

The cause of death was not given. Preval had been treated for prostate cancer in Cuba in 2001.

Preval was elected by a landslide in 1995 as the chosen successor of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and turned power back to Aristide when he left office five years later after a term marked by political infighting.

His second term, which started in 2006, was marred by the disastrous earthquake of Jan, 12, 2010, which killed more than 300,000 people and displaced more than 1 million, according to estimates. Many Haitians accused him of a fumbled response to the tragedy.

Preval was born Jan. 17, 1943, in the town of Marmelade in rural northern Haiti. His father, Claude, was an agronomist who served under President Paul Magloire and fled during the early years of the dictatorsh­ip of Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier.

Preval earned an agronomy degree from Gembloux Agricultur­al University in Belgium and later studied geothermal sciences at the University of Pisa in Italy. In 1970, he moved to New York, where he worked as a waiter and a messenger. Five years later, he returned to Haiti and worked at the National Institute for Mineral Resources, according to an official biography.

In 1988, two years after a popular uprising ousted Duvalier’s son, Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, Preval returned to Haiti and opened a bakery in the capital, Port-au-Prince. He supplied bread to an orphanage run by Aristide, a Roman Catholic priest who led a movement to oust the younger Duvalier and later became the country’s first democratic­ally elected president.

Preval became a leading figure in Aristide’s Fanmi Lavalas political movement, which enjoyed a huge following among the poor and was feared and hated by the tiny community of elites who long dominated the country’s economy and government.

Aristide, by now no longer a priest, was elected president in 1990 and appointed Preval to be his prime minister. A military coup ousted Aristide seven months into his term, and the two leaders went into exile.

A U.S.-led invasion restored Aristide to power in 1994, and he was allowed to serve the year-plus remaining in his term.

Running as Aristide’s successor, and with his backing, Preval won 80% of the vote in 1995, though only a quarter of eligible voters cast ballots.

Preval’s first term was marked by political infighting, with Aristide seen as the power behind the throne. When Preval completed his term in 2001 and transferre­d power to Aristide, he became Haiti’s first democratic­ally elected president to leave office after a full term.

Preval then withdrew from politics and spent his time in Marmelade during Aristide’s second term, which ended when he was forced to flee the country after a violent rebellion in 2004. An interim government backed by the United States then took power.

Preval won a second term in 2006 in an election that nearly headed to a runoff. As his supporters demonstrat­ed in the streets, the electoral council recounted ballots and found him to have an outright majority.

Preval’s second term was marked by a dramatic increase in kidnapping­s, gang warfare, riots over soaring food prices and a series of tropical storms that caused widespread flooding and death, particular­ly around Gonaives in the north.

Still, Haiti enjoyed a rare political stability and its economy started improving.

But the 2010 earthquake destroyed much of the capital, including the National Palace and many other government buildings. The government estimated 314,000 people were killed and more than 1.3 million were displaced.

There was widespread public anger at Preval, who made few public appearance­s after the disaster and was blamed for much of the chaos engulfing the capital. His chosen successor, Jude Celestin, lost in the first round of the 2010 presidenti­al election, which was won later by popular musician Michel Martelly.

On May 14, 2011, Preval handed over power to Martelly, marking the first transfer of power from a Haitian president to a member of the opposition.

Preval then left politics and lived quietly at his estate in the mountains above Port-au-Prince and in the Miami area, where many Haitian expatriate­s live.

His survivors include his third wife, Elisabeth “Babette” Delatour, and two adult daughters.

 ?? Jean Jacques Augustin European Pressphoto Agency ?? A CAREER OF FIRSTS Rene Preval, shown in 2013, was the only democratic­ally elected president of Haiti to win and complete two terms in office and the first to transfer power to a member of the opposition.
Jean Jacques Augustin European Pressphoto Agency A CAREER OF FIRSTS Rene Preval, shown in 2013, was the only democratic­ally elected president of Haiti to win and complete two terms in office and the first to transfer power to a member of the opposition.

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