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27674: Craig (news) NYT: As Haiti's Votes Are Tallied, a Fragile Peace Breaks Out (fwd)





From: Dan Craig


February 12, 2006
As Haiti's Votes Are Tallied, a Fragile Peace Breaks Out
By GINGER THOMPSON

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Feb. 11 — The national elections, so long in coming, seem to have brought a fragile peace to the most troubled country in the hemisphere. Partial results gave a wide lead to René Préval, a former president who is considered a protégé to former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. However, it remained unclear whether he would win the more than 50 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff.

With votes from 72 percent of the polling places counted, election authorities reported last night, Mr. Préval had won 49.6 percent of the vote, compared with 11.6 percent for Leslie Manigat, who held the presidency for five months in 1988 but was ousted by the military, and 8.1 percent for Charles Baker, a wealthy garment-factory owner. The rest of the results were expected to be available at noon on Sunday.

No matter what the outcome, the elections have been a major accomplishment, without the fraud and bloodshed of this country's previous political contests.

Much of the political hostilities stirred by activists among the poor and leaders of the business elite have been drowned out by the nation's pride in pulling off an election that started out shaky but ended with heavy, some say historic, voter turnout, and without a single serious incident of political violence.

As the nation waited for final results, there were scattered apprehensions about what was perceived as the probable victory of Mr. Préval, a man so closely linked to Mr. Aristide, who was forced from power by an uprising two years ago and lives in exile in South Africa.

Mr. Préval has won support from the densely populated slums that were Mr. Aristide's strongholds. Before the vote, crowds of demonstrators said they supported Mr. Préval in part because they hoped he would bring Mr. Aristide back home.

Opponents of Mr. Préval dread that possibility. They worry that Mr. Préval will serve as Mr. Aristide's puppet, a suspicion that tarnished Mr. Préval's record as president from 1996 to 2000. Others worry that whether or not Mr. Aristide comes back, Mr. Préval will govern by his example.

Nicole Magloire, who fled the country during the 30-year Duvalier dictatorship and supported Mr. Aristide in the celebrated elections that brought him to power in 1990, said that in all the years she had known Mr. Préval, he had been a loyal ally of Mr. Aristide's.

"Neither was he perceived as a militant, nor as a man with great personal ambition," Ms. Magloire said, in an interview on her elegant terrace, enclosed by soaring stalks of live bamboo. "He was content to serve the needs of Mr. Aristide, when he was prime minister, and it was the same when he was president."

"Now we want to know, is he running to be a puppet, or does he have his own agenda?" she continued.

Still, patience and confidence in the process seem to prevail over the conspiracy theories that typically dominate political discourse here. The kidnappings and gunfights that had become a terrifying fact of daily life were rare last week.

David Wimhurst, a spokesman for the United Nations Stabilization Mission, offered some statistics. Troops posted in and around Cité Soleil, a violent slum here in the capital, fired fewer than 700 rounds this week, compared with 4,000 rounds the week before, he said. There were only four kidnappings this week, he said, half the daily average just two weeks ago.

There were other signs, as well. A man said to be a gang member in Cité Soleil talked Friday of being ready to lay down his weapons. Bishop Desmond Tutu arrived Saturday from South Africa to offer a Mass and urge this country to commit itself to national reconciliation.

The burden of life in shantytowns that reek of raw sewage was lifted by the anticipation of a clean, transparent transition. At a rally on Saturday of about 300 people who gathered in Cité Soleil and marched to the presidential palace, there were more glimmers of hope than pessimism about the future.

There was hope, too, in more prosperous places.

"After the elections, people know that the way to choose a leader is by the ballot, and the way to remove a leader is to vote against him," Pavel Desrosier, a 29-year-old doctor, said earlier this week as he drove in Pétionville, a hillside town above Port-au-Prince. "For us, it was a big step toward democracy."

Mr. Préval waited for the results at his father's hometown, Marmelade, a lush mountain village of some 10,000 people. Built around a plaza draped with laurel and bougainvillea, where children do their homework at a computer center in the afternoons and play in classical concerts on Sundays, Marmelade seems a world away from the poverty and political upheaval that has pushed Haiti close to collapse.

For Mr. Préval, Marmelade has been a laboratory for the social programs he was unable to carry out during his presidency, his friends said. An agronomist, he won multimillion-dollar grants from Taiwan to begin farming cooperatives and to open small factories that produce orange juice and bamboo furniture. He brought doctors and teachers from Cuba to open clinics and teach music.

But Marmelade was also a kind of refuge. During an interview there on Monday, Mr. Préval, 63, looked the image of serenity; sipping Scotch on a breezy veranda — his feet up, his work boots untied before taking an afternoon nap. "There will be no violence," Mr. Préval said, when asked what he would do if clashes occurred after the first round of elections. "Why would there be violence? If I win, the people will be happy."

He raised the question that has hounded his campaign before the reporters. "You want to know if I am going to bring back Aristide?" he joked. He then promptly ducked it, saying the Constitution does not require any Haitian to live in exile for life and that returning to Haiti was up to Mr. Aristide.

Political analysts have said ambiguity has been the genius of Mr. Préval's campaign. He began his campaign by showing up at the electoral offices on the last day for candidates to register, and delivered his application without making a statement to the news media. He refused requests for interviews and debates. He put off most campaign appearances until the final month.

The silence in the campaign's early weeks allowed him to consolidate the support of the masses of people who see him as another Aristide, the analysts said. It also allowed him to send equally cryptic signals to the well-to-do sectors of society that he was something different.

Mr. Préval did not campaign as the candidate of Mr. Aristide's Lavalas Party, but started his own ticket called Lespwa — Creole for hope. His advisers included business leaders and technocrats with no allegiance to Mr. Aristide. His campaign was financed by wealthy donors.

Opponents tried to attack Mr. Préval's vagueness, saying it not only masked a lack of a clear vision for how to lift Haiti out of ruin but also allowed him to avoid answering allegations of corruption and political assassinations against Mr. Aristide's government. The two were once so closely tied that a slogan from the 1995 election said they were twins.

"Préval's biggest fans are drug dealers," said Jean Esnold, 47, an administrator at the state insurance agency.

Others have said the two political leaders are not twins at all. Mr. Préval's political style seems the polar opposite of Mr. Aristide's. While Mr. Aristide delivered speeches with the power of a thunderstorm, and reveled in confrontation, Mr. Préval seems repulsed by the spotlight and prefers to duck a fight.

Brian Concannon, the director for the Institute for Justice and Democracy, said Mr. Préval's low-key approach was the key to his becoming the only president in recent history to finish his five-year term and peacefully hand over power.

Jocelyn McCalla, of the National Coalition for Haitian Rights, in an telephone interview from New York, said that approach was the reason Mr. Préval was never able to get out of Mr. Aristide's shadow.

Kesner F. Pharel, an economist and the host of a popular radio program, said: "I don't think Préval loves power like Aristide. Aristide leads by controlling people. Préval can manipulate people without saying anything."

When asked whether he thought Mr. Préval would invite Mr. Aristide back to Haiti, Mr. Pharel raised comparisons to President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela. "I don't think Préval will have the power to challenge the international community. He will not be Chávez, with a lot of oil money."

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/12/international/americas/12haiti.html