The Borneo Post

Moise wins Haiti presidenti­al vote in first round — Early results

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PORT-AU-PRINCE: Businessma­n Jovenel Moise appealed for unity late Monday after official preliminar­y results showed he won Haiti’s presidenti­al election in the first round.

Provisiona­l Electoral Council president Leopold Berlanger cautioned that the results were preliminar­y and final results would not be confirmed until December 29.

Three of the council’s nine members refused to sign the results announced on Monday, signalling a potential conflict over the outcome.

Moise, a 48-year-old businessma­n who was backed by former president Michel Martelly but has never held political office, appealed to Haitians to unite behind him.

“I appeal to the country’s youth, to all Haitians who live abroad, to all the country’s profession­als, to stand by my side to raise the country up, because Haiti is on its knees,” he said, speaking at a luxury hotel minutes after the results were announced.

The election council’s executive director Uder Antoine said Moise won 55.67 per cent of the votes. Jude Celestin, candidate of the opposition LAPEH, was next with 19.52 per cent.

Candidate Moise Jean Charles got 11.04 per cent and Maryse Narcisse of the Fanmi Lavalas party 8.99 per cent.

Any candidate who wins more than half of the votes cast in the first round is the victor.

Haitian law offers candidates the opportunit­y to challenge the results from the presidenti­al and legislativ­e election in electoral courts, before final results are published on December 29.

Moise reached out to his opponents in appealing for unity.

“This evening, I have a special thought for each of my competitor­s, for each citizen who was a candidate because they have a project for Haiti,” he said.

“My brothers and sisters, it’s together that we will change Haiti, it’s together we must work to enable every Haitian man and woman to live better.”

The nation was on edge as the results were announced, after past episodes of sometimes bloody violence in a desperatel­y poor country marred by repeated episodes of political upheaval.

Interim leader Jocelerme Privert called for calm ahead of the result announceme­nt.

“Resorting to acts of violence can only spoil the fruits of the beautiful day we had on November 20,” Privert said at the presidenti­al palace in Port-au-Prince, referring to the vote held earlier this month.

The election was a key step in restoring constituti­onal order in Haiti, where former president Martelly’s mandate expired after the results of last year’s first round poll were annulled amid widespread claims of fraud. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Jovenel Moise (left), presidenti­al candidate of the PHTK political party, speaks following preliminar­y results in the first round of Haiti’s presidenti­al election in the commune of Petion Ville, in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince. — AFP photo
Jovenel Moise (left), presidenti­al candidate of the PHTK political party, speaks following preliminar­y results in the first round of Haiti’s presidenti­al election in the commune of Petion Ville, in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince. — AFP photo

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