Los Angeles Times

Only 21% turn out for Haitian vote

Low level of support may not bode well for banana exporter-turned-president.

- By Alexandra Zavis alexandra.zavis @latimes.com

After more than a week of vote counting, it appears that a banana exporter with no experience in government has won Haiti’s presidenti­al election with the support of roughly 10% of eligible voters.

There were reports of tires set on fire and car windows smashed in parts of the capital, Port-au-Prince, after the provisiona­l tally was announced late Monday following a laborious process of counting paper ballots by hand. At least three losing candidates rejected the results.

That did not seem to bode well for attempts to bring stability to a nation racked by political upheaval, extreme poverty, natural disasters and a deadly cholera outbreak.

But the violence was not reported to be serious, and analysts said there was reason to hope that the country will finally get its wobbly democracy onto a firmer footing after nearly a year without an elected leader.

“What Haitians need more than anything is a democratic­ally elected, constituti­onal government that is stable in order to run the country and figure out how to spend reconstruc­tion money that is coming in,” said Nicole Phillips, a staff attorney with the Bostonbase­d nonprofit Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti who served as a monitor for the Nov. 20 election.

Haiti’s Provisiona­l Electoral Council said Jovenel Moise, the successor chosen by the country’s last elected leader, received nearly 56% of the vote, enough to avoid a runoff against any of his 26 rivals.

But turnout was just 21%, and a tenth of the sheets used to tally the vote were thrown out for reasons that were not immediatel­y clear, giving ammunition to Moise’s top three opponents who plan to contest the results.

“We say there has been cheating,” Jude Celesti, a former state constructi­on chief who placed second with just under a fifth of the vote, told Agence FrancePres­se news agency.

Political parties had 72 hours to file complaints with Haiti’s electoral tribunal, which must investigat­e any allegation­s of irregulari­ties before the results are certified Dec. 29.

Gunshots were heard in a number of districts of the capital when the preliminar­y results were announced — whether in celebratio­n or protest was not clear. Supporters of the Lavalas Family party, founded by ousted President JeanBertra­nd Aristide, had already been demonstrat­ing for days.

“The long and the short of it is that in Haiti you have an electoral system that very few people trust,” said Eduardo Gamarra, a Haiti expert at Florida Internatio­nal University. That will make it difficult for Moise — or anyone else — to govern the highly polarized country, he said.

Moise reached out to opponents after the preliminar­y results were announced, saying, “Together we will change Haiti.”

“We are going to use the people, the sun, the land and water to develop the country,” he said.

Moise, who was not widely known until President Michel Martelly picked him to run as the Tet Kale party’s presidenti­al candidate, won the most votes during a first round of balloting in October 2015. But those results were annulled after a special commission found evidence of fraud.

The country has been led by a caretaker government since Martelly’s term expired in February. After several delays, a redo vote was scheduled for early October. But those plans were scrapped after Hurricane Matthew devastated parts of the island, which was still recovering from a 2010 earthquake that killed at least 220,000 people and left more than a million homeless.

That the election took place at all was a major achievemen­t, analysts said.

This time, the balloting was more orderly and calm, analysts said. But there was considerab­le voter fatigue, especially in parts of the country that were ravaged by the storm. Turnout was among the lowest ever seen in a presidenti­al election.

“Four out of five decided it wasn’t worth their time, or they weren’t able logistical­ly to be able to vote,” Phillips said. “Now the question will be, will there be the legitimacy with the Haitian people with this new government.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Hector Retamal AFP/Getty Images ?? A MAN KICKS AWAY a tear-gas canister fired in Port-au-Prince during election protests in Haiti. Overall, the violence was not reported to be serious.
Photograph­s by Hector Retamal AFP/Getty Images A MAN KICKS AWAY a tear-gas canister fired in Port-au-Prince during election protests in Haiti. Overall, the violence was not reported to be serious.
 ??  ?? JOVENEL MOISE reached out to his opponents, saying, “Together we will change Haiti.”
JOVENEL MOISE reached out to his opponents, saying, “Together we will change Haiti.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States