Although Haiti’s
Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) announced winners of the April 21, 2006 legislative run-off
elections on May 8, dozens of candidates that lost their bid for Senate and
Deputy seats continue to demand new votes in several districts, charging fraud
and irregularities.
The
Senate candidate for the West Department of Serge Gilles’ social democratic
Fusion party, Marie Denise Claude, claims that there was massive fraud at
several voting centers around the capital, Port-au-Prince.
Finishing in fourth place according to final CEP results, Claude charges that
most of the irregularities took place in Building 2004, where Cité Soleil residents voted. (Cité Soleil, Haiti’s
largest and poorest slum, was a stronghold for former
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.) Claude is calling for the vote at this
center to be reheld and for a recount at the other
centers where she charges there was fraud.
Fusion’s
candidate for deputy from the southern district of Port-au-Prince, Yolette Mengual, accuses her
victorious rival from President-elect René Préval’s Lespwa party, Jean Myrtil Clédor, of having bribed voters and members of electoral offices
to fix the vote in his favor. Mengual is backed in
her protest by the “Network of Women Candidates to Win,” which is affiliated
with the USAID-supported Haitian Coalition of Women Leaders (COHFEL). Mengual, who garnered only 24% of the vote to Clédor’s 76%, has called for annulment of that district’s
election.
Also
in the West department, the losing candidates for the Fonds-Verettes/Ganthier
district near Croix des Bouquets, which was won by MODEREH’s
P. Jude Destiné with 20% of the vote, have marched in front of the CEP’s headquarters to denounce what they claim was massive
fraud on April 21.
On
the island of La Gonâve, the candidate for
deputy of Evans Paul’s Alyans party, Marie Ginette Galliotte, charged that
there were flagrant irregularities. She said she was the victim of sexual
discrimination and is calling for a new vote.
In
the Artibonite, partisans of the Senate candidate of
Leslie Manigat’s Assembly of National Progressive
Democrats (RDNP), Willy Jean-Baptiste, called for
annulment of the vote in certain districts. They even held protests blocking
the southern entry to the city of Gonaïves
to show their anger. However, one would expect Jean-Baptiste
to simply concede the race because Manigat, to
protest the CEP’s ruling that Préval
won in the first round where RDNP placed a distant second, asked all his
party’s candidates to withdraw from their races.
Similar
cries of foul are coming from Fusion’s candidate for Deputy for the district of
Marchand-Dessalines, Wouldi
Simon. He claims that voters and his poll watchers were brutalized by
supporters of Jean Pressoir Dort,
his adversary from Youri Latortue’s
Artibonite in Action party (LAAA) who won with 56% of
the vote. In Desdunes, the candidate for Deputy of
the Struggling Peoples Organization(OPL), Beaudelaire Noelsaint, has
accused a local group called Base 32, which supported the Fusion’s winning
candidate Levaillant Louis-Jeune,
of mistreating his partisans and preventing them from voting for him. He is
calling for annulment of the vote.
In
the Northwest department, the Senate candidate of the Bridge party (PONT), Evallière Beauplan, placed second
with 39.42% of the vote, thereby winning a four-year Senate term. But he
rejected the CEP’s results which proclaimed Alyans’ Eddy Bastien victor with
41.56% of the vote, which nets a six-year seat. Beauplan
says he has evidence to prove fraud and has called for cancellation of the
elections at certain voting centers, like that in Saint Louis du Nord.
Meanwhile,
the MIRN’s candidate for Deputy for the district of
Jean Rabel, André Joseph, called the CEP to carry out
a serious investigation before publishing its final election results. Joseph
accuses Gerard Théramène, his adversary from the
party Konba, of having his partisans stuff ballot
boxes.
In
the Southeast department, one of Lespwa’s Senate
candidates, Frantz Large, curiously came in fourth after having placed second
in the first round. “The people in charge
of the polling stations stuffed the ballot boxes in favor of other candidates,”
Large declared. “In communes like Belle-Anse, Thiotte and Cayes-Jacmel, the number of the citizens who voted is much
greater than the number of people registered.” At least Large brings
verifiable charges. Two other Lespwa candidates –
Joseph Lambert and Laurent Féquière Mathurin – won the first and second Senate seats for the
Southeast. The OPL’s Ricard
Pierre, who finished well behind Large in the first round, won third place.
In
the Nippes department, Anglade
Jacob, one of Lespwa’s Senate candidates, accused CEP
secretary general Rosemond Pradel
and director general Jacques Bernard of carrying out under the table maneuvers
which favored Fusion’s candidate, Huguette Lamour, who finished third, securing a two-year Senate
seat. Jacob is protesting his fourth
place finish, which denies him any Senate seat. Another Lespwa
candidate, Nenel Cassy,
finished in first place, winning a six-year Senate seat.
Frantz
André Féquière, the ADEBAH’s
candidate for deputy for Anse-à-Veau, has also called
for new elections in his district, charging fraud which favored Fusion’s
candidate Frantz Robert Mondé, who got 62% of the
vote.
In
Haiti’s
westernmost Grande Anse department, the police
arrested Sorel Yacinthe,
Fusion’s candidate for Deputy for the district of Moron/Chanbellan.
They charge that he assassinated a Lespwa partisan.
However, according to the CEP’s partial results, it
seems the accused murderer is winning the race with 52% of the vote.
As
one can see, there are no shortage of disputes, and
unfortunately some which might be very justified will be lumped together with
frivolous challenges and dishonest maneuvers. Despite the jostling, the fact
remains: Préval’s Espwa
party is far from having a majority in either house of the Parliament.
On
May 8, the Haitian state’s official journal, Le Moniteur, published the official
results of the run-offs for 27 of 30 senators and 86 of 99 deputies. The
elected rushed the same day to the “newly
renovated” Legislative Palace
to register for Haiti’s
48th Legislative session.
The
registration process continued on May 9, and the new parliamentarians also
prepared to hold their first National Assembly. Three Senate seats and thirteen
lower house seats are still vacant because of the vote was annulled in thirteen
districts in the Northeast department for obvious cases of irregularities and
fraud.
The
Deputy elected from Maïssade, Willio
Joseph, had been arrested and imprisoned in January on charges of stealing cars
and criminal conspiracy. But a judge set him free, and he was sworn into the
Parliament.
Meanwhile,
the vice-president of the Parliament’s Maintenance Commission, Alix Richard, said that there is still a great deal of
renovation work to be done on the Legislative Palace, which means that the new
legislators will be working in less than ideal conditions.
Préval is scheduled to be sworn in before the Parliament on
the morning of May 14.