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27841: Hermantin(News)Rays of hope for Haiti's future (fwd)





From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>

Posted on Thu, Feb. 16, 2006


ELECTION
Rays of hope for Haiti's future

BY ROGER NORIEGA
rnoriega@tewlaw.com

Whoever is inaugurated president of Haiti on March 29 will face daunting challenges in a country flattened by poverty, exhausted by turmoil and bedeviled by a legacy of discredited leadership. No man alive could hope to govern Haiti without the legitimacy conferred by honest elections. The matter is so important that Haitians voted in great numbers, surpassing expectations, slowing the final vote count and producing a close result. Under the rules, the top two contenders may have to face each other in a runoff. How these candidates and their supporters conduct themselves in this electoral crisis is a lesson in how they might govern.

Based on unofficial and impartial results in Haiti's Feb. 7 national elections, many observers concluded that René Préval, former president and ally of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, had scored a first-round victory on the strength of impressive margins won in Port-au-Prince. But Haitians are not finished having their say. As the votes from outside the capital are added to the national tally, it appears that Préval may fall short of the 50 percent plus one vote required to win outright. If these results are certified after alleged irregularities are resolved, Préval would have to face a fellow former president, Leslie Manigat, in a second-round vote scheduled for March 19.

On Monday, agitated Préval supporters mobbed the tabulation center demanding victory, even as the votes were still being counted. The unofficial numbers -- posted at www.cepht.org -- seem to paint a picture of a country divided. It appears that Préval simply does not have the overwhelming support in the north to sustain a national majority.

It is not insignificant that Préval's nearest competitor trails him by around 35 points. But it is no less important that a majority of Haitian voters cast their ballots for someone else or left their ballots blank. Haiti's electoral law contemplated just such an eventuality, and it requires a runoff so that the majority's voice can be heard clearly.

Haitians have suffered the consequences when, not too long ago, they were denied legitimate government because outsiders pronounced slip-shod elections as ''good enough'' for Haiti. Now, violent mobs may be trying to convince those tallying the ballots that 49 percent is ``good enough.''

To be sure, Préval must be allowed to present any evidence of irregularities. Although Haiti's electoral law is fairly clear, no one can predict whether the country's electoral machinery will be able to sort through lost ballots and illegible tally sheets to sort out a razor-thin electoral result. But that is at the very least, a more sound approach than shaving the rules to avoid a riot. After all, Préval's opponents -- roughly half the population -- will have every reason to reject the legitimacy of a leader who counted on a mob to seal his victory. Haitians have had enough of that, and peaceful elections are intended to be a step away from such violent methods.

Patience and faith needed

In these tough times, multilateral organizations prove their true worth. United Nations and Organization of American States advisors helped deliver a triumphant day for Haitian voters, defying the skeptics. Now these same U.N. and OAS diplomats are helping Haitian politicians sort out their options and providing valuable technical assistance to certify the final results of the election.

All candidates should be appealing to their followers to have patience and faith in their fellow Haitians as this electoral crisis is overcome. Patience and faith are going to be needed in large measure in the years ahead, no matter who is finally elected.

In the meantime, René Préval and Leslie Manigat are both capable men who could help lead their country to a much better future. Manigat is a wise elder statesman, historian and academic who held office for about four months before being toppled by a military coup in 1988. And, while history will record that this is Préval's second chance to govern Haiti, the political reality is that it is his first. Indeed, Haiti watchers know that Préval spent much of his term looking over his shoulder for his volatile and violent predecessor.

An early test for Haiti's next president will be whom he chooses as prime minister to form a government and whether he respects the constitutional rules that strictly limit the president's power. Other tests will be whether he welcomes qualified and honest opposition figures in his cabinet and encourages his national police to fight crime and corruption. To be sure, international donors will insist on transparency and accountability as a condition of continued support. And U.N. peacekeepers cannot be expected to stand guard as a new government coddles the type of gangsters that Aristide employed to terrorize his opponents before they turned on him.

Not too many men in Haiti's bloody history have had more than one chance to be president. Manigat and Préval are obviously willing to try. If they put their country first and look to the future, they will get through these elections having earned the support of friends of Haiti everywhere.

Roger Noriega was U.S. assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs from 2003 to 2005. He is a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a director of the Miami-based law firm Tew Cardenas, LLP.