The Borneo Post

Haitians vote hoping to restore constituti­onal order

-

PORT-AU- PRINCE: Haitians go to the polls yesterday to elect a president and lawmakers, in hopes of restoring the country to constituti­onal order after more than a year of political crisis.

Nearly 6.2 million voters are eligible to cast their ballots to choose among a vast field of 27 presidenti­al candidates.

The Caribbean nation – the poorest in the Americas – had a brutal struggle to end slavery and colonialis­m followed by decades of corrupt autocracy and, in recent years, a series of crippling natural disasters.

Coming three decades after the fall of the Duvalier dictatorsh­ips, yesterday’s delayed polls for president and part of parliament could mark a chance to start building the institutio­ns constituti­onal rule.

But many challenges – poverty, civil unrest, corruption and the lingering effects of the 2010 earthquake, a cholera epidemic and last month’s severe hurricane – remain to cloud the poll.

The first round of the presidenti­al election was scheduled for October 9, but was delayed after devastatin­g Hurricane Matthew pummeled the country on October 4.

Yesterday’s vote originally had been set for October 2015, but it was scrapped over claims of massive fraud.

The cancellati­on prevented President Michel Martelly, a popular singer elected in May 2011, from transferri­ng power to his successor, picked by popular of vote, by February 7 as the Haitian constituti­on requires.

Martelly had won the 2011 runoff vote only after his opponent Jude Celestin was disqualifi­ed for alleged fraud.

Last year, the tables were turned when Celestin refused to accept his apparent first-round defeat to Martelly’s handpicked successor, agricultur­al baron Jovenel Moise. An independen­t panel eventually agreed with the opposition that Moise’s win was tainted by massive fraud and the poll results were thrown out – creating a power vacuum when Martelly’s mandate expired in February.

Parliament chose Senate chief Jocelerme Privert as interim head of state – initially for a mandate of three months – but, amid civil unrest and political infighting, new polls were delayed.

Though there is a long list of presidenti­al hopefuls, in reality only a handful have a chance of making it past the first round.

The wealthy Moise has the support of Martelly’s camp and his PHTK party and Celestin, backed by the opposition LAPEH, remains his main threat.

To their left, the populist Moise Jean- Charles of the ‘Children of Dessalines’ movement hopes his high profile in anti-Martelly protests will carry the day.

And the campaign of Maryse Narcisse has attracted attention, since she represents the Fanmi Lavalas party of former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide, still a hero to many of Haiti’s poor. — AFP

 ??  ?? Men check a list during the eviction of residents from a shelter for people displaced by Hurricane Matthew in Lycee Jean Claude Museau, which will be used as a voting centre, before the election in Les Cayes, Haiti. — Reuters photo
Men check a list during the eviction of residents from a shelter for people displaced by Hurricane Matthew in Lycee Jean Claude Museau, which will be used as a voting centre, before the election in Les Cayes, Haiti. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia