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Haiti gives Aristide ally a second
chance
By Danna Harman
February 14, 2006. (Christian Monitor). PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI –
Nearly a week after elections in Haiti, with the final votes still
being counted, René Préval, a mild-mannered former
president, was leading 33 candidates with 48.7 percent of the votes
- a clear victory, but not the 50 percent needed to avoid a March
19 runoff.
As news of the outcome spread, thousands of Préval supporters
took to the streets in the capital pounding drums, erecting roadblocks,
and calling for a recount. They claim tens of thousands of Préval
ballots had been invalidated so as to deny the candidate an outright
win. "The electoral council is trying to do what it can to
diminish the percentage of Préval so it goes to a second
round," Jean-Henoc Faroul, president of one electoral district
told The Associated Press.
But even with the vote almost certainly going to another round,
Préval seems most likely to become Haiti's next leader. With
90 percent of the votes counted at press time, Leslie Manigat was
coming in a distant second with only 11.8 percent. Haitians now
are looking ahead to how Préval will try to bridge an entrenched
rich-poor gap and bring security to this troubled nation.
Born 63 years ago in Port-au-Prince into a relatively well-to-do
family, Préval's father was a minister of agriculture - until
the family was forced to flee the dictatorship of Francois "Papa
Doc" Duvalier in the early 1960s. Préval studied agronomy
in Belgium, before returning to Haiti in 1975.
Préval and Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a liberation theologist
hugely popular among the poor, became friends when they joined forces
in "Lavalas," a movement formed to protest the dictatorship
of Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier. And, when Mr. Aristide
later won the country's first democratic election in 1990, Préval
was named prime minister - until a military coup pushed them both
into exile less than a year later.
When the US restored Aristide to power three years later, Préval
was appointed Haiti's director of the Economic and Social Assistance
Fund, a USAID/World Bank-funded effort to promote small development
projects. And in 1995 Préval entered the presidential campaign
and won.
Préval's presidency is distinctive because he remains the
only president in Haiti's 202-year history to win a democratic election,
serve a full term, and peacefully hand power to a successor. But
while his years in office, from 1996 to 2001, were calm and lacking
in any major corruption scandals, many dismissed him as nothing
more than a puppet of his mentor Aristide who returned to power
after the 2000 elections.
Now, as Préval enters a second round to become the leader
of this beleaguered country that has been led by an interim government
since Aristide was ousted in 2004, he will no doubt be pressed to
answer a question he has dodged for months: will he bring Aristide
- who remains in exile in South Africa - back to power?
Préval did not run under Aristide's Lavalas party banner
but rather with his own party - Lespwa, which means "hope"
in Haitian Creole. Nonetheless, he was adopted by many of Aristide's
former supporters as their candidate, and his rallies echoed with
chants of "Bring Aristide home." Likewise, those who had
campaigned to get Aristide out of office have expressed deep concern
about Préval because of his association with the former leader.
"It's incumbent that he ... be his own man," stressed
Dumarsais Simeus, the popular Haitian-American business tycoon who
was blocked from running for constitutional reasons. "He seems
serious about doing something to be a bridge between the poor and
rich in this country - not to bring back the days of Aristide,"
says Mr. Simeus, who adds that he would be keen to work with a Préval
government.
Charles Henri Baker, who came in third in tally to date, expresses
a view typical of the business elite when he complains that Préval,
"didn't do anything in office, except give us the chimères
in Cité Soleil." Mr. Baker is referring to the slum
gangs that Aristide allegedly armed - and which have since set off
a devastating wave of kidnapping and bloodshed. "We are in
bad shape if he becomes president," says Baker.
Préval has not responded to these charges, but has repeatedly
said the solution to the violence in Cité Soleil cannot be
a military one, and should involve social, economic, and political
investment.
• Ms. Harman is Latin America correspondent for the Monitor
and USA Today.
From: URL: http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0214/p01s01-woam.html
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