Haiti Uneasy after Electoral Outcome
Carin ZissisDecember 8, 2010
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| Protesters rejected results, released December 7, of the November 28 vote. (AP Photo) |
Results released by the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) show Manigat with 31.37 percent of the vote compared to second-place Célestin’s 22.48 percent. There was little surprise that long-time opposition leader Manigat took the top spot, given that she had been pegged as the frontrunner. But many observers believed she would be matched up against Martelly, who won 21.84 percent of ballots and came in just behind Célestin, who was endorsed by President René Préval. “[W]ith just 0.64 percentage points separating Célestin, 48, and Martelly, 49, the road to the presidency may not be that clear cut,” reports The Miami Herald. Candidates have three days to contest the results.
That protests broke out was of little surprise; before polls even closed on November 28, a majority of presidential candidates rejected the election as fraudulent. Observers expressed concern over “irregularities” at the polls while critics worried over ties between the CEP and the Préval government. With tension brewing, the UN had urged Haitians to wait for the results before disputing them. But, with the EU-backed National Election Observation Council predicting a different election outcome, the U.S. Embassy to Haiti said it would “support efforts to thoroughly review irregularities in support of electoral results that are consistent with the will of the Haitian people.”
On Tuesday night, demonstrators not only protested the CEP’s vote outcome, but also showed outrage over news that UN peacekeepers may well have sparked the cholera outbreak that has, thus far, claimed some 2,000 lives and sickened 100,000 people. A paper authored by a French epidemiologist points to Nepalese peacekeepers as the source, though UN officials called the report “inconclusive.” Get updates about the cholera outbreak from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
Learn more:
- An AS/COA hemispheric update explores who’s who of the country’s major presidential candidates.
- Website of Haiti’s electoral council.
- Get news updated from The Miami Herald’s Haiti page.
- “On the Goat Path,” a blog by a freelance journalist and a non-profit worker, offers coverage and photos from the election.
- MSNBC.com’s photo blog offers images of the protests that broke out on the evening of December 8.
Send questions and comments for the editor to: ascoa.online@as-coa.org.
See more in: Haiti, Democracy & Elections
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