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An uncertain course
in Haiti
René Préval is the nation’s new leader, but
what that means is unclear -particularly since he hasn’t
spoken
By Letta Tayler
February 21, 2006. (Newsday). PORT-AU-PRINCE,
Haiti -- For five tumultuous days last week, chaos gripped this
tiny island nation as protests mounted over alleged fraud in presidential
elections intended to usher in democracy. An 11th-hour deal brokered
by foreign diplomats installed front-runner René Préval
as president, ending the turmoil.
Only one thing was missing in the drama: a word from the leading
actor. Other than a brief acknowledgment of victory to a local
radio station, the agronomist and former president has not been
heard from since he was declared the winner before dawn Thursday.
"No questions. I'll talk to you
Wednesday," a smiling but firm Préval told reporters
Friday outside his sister's house in a suburb of this capital
city. Then he disappeared inside.
It was a remarkable performance in a country celebrated for theatrics,
particularly given the sequence of events that led to his anointment.
With barely the flick of a finger, Préval appeared to prompt
tens of thousands of his impoverished supporters to take to the
streets starting Feb. 11 to ensure he was declared the winner
of Feb. 7 presidential voting, and with another flick, make the
protests stop.
His enigmatic response, and the role he seemed to play like a
magician behind the curtain, have only increased questions about
how he will lead Haiti when he takes office March 29.
Detractors said last week's marches and flaming roadblocks could
presage a reversion to the mob rule used by leftist firebrand
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide before armed rebels ousted him
two years ago.
Leslie Manigat, a foreign affairs scholar who finished a distant
second to Préval in the election, put it the most venomously.
"The dog must not return to its vomit," said Manigat,
who has his own political baggage: He served briefly as president
in 1988 in an election rigged by the military.
Distancing from Aristide
Préval, 63, who was president from 1996 to 2001, is a former
Aristide protege, but he distanced himself after Aristide became
mired in corruption scandals.
United Nations officials and diplomats from countries that poured
millions of dollars into the election say Préval's actions
since the vote suggest he is not a pawn of the divisive Aristide.
Since Thursday, they note, Préval has been meeting with
opposition leaders to discuss national reconciliation.
Another welcome sign, diplomats said, was Préval's ability
to keep protests calm in a country notorious for political violence.
A 9,300-member UN peacekeeping force has struggled to keep order
in this nation of 8.3 million since Aristide's ouster.
"There is a regret that Haiti was not able to get completely
away from the politics of the street, but a recognition that you
also are seeing an evolution toward peaceful protests," outgoing
U.S. ambassador Tim Carney said in an interview.
Préval's supporters began protesting after his lead slipped
from nearly two-thirds in initial vote tallies to just under the
50 percent he needed to avoid a runoff. Haitian officials brought
Préval to 51.1 percent by redistributing a suspiciously
high number of blank votes.
In a nationally broadcast speech last Tuesday at the height of
the week's protests, Préval urged demonstrators to remain
peaceful. Yet he also showed his power. "Remove the barricades
from the streets or we'll lose the fight," he urged. Within
minutes, every barricade in Port-au-Prince came down.
"We do what the president says," said Junior Adolf,
an unemployed Préval supporter, as he removed smoldering
tires from a thoroughfare.
Keeping them happy
How long the masses will heed Préval's call if he can't
swiftly reduce Haiti's 70 percent poverty and 75 percent unemployment
rates is unclear.
"It's a double-edged sword," said Robert Fatton, a Haiti
expert at the University of Virginia. "Préval has
the capacity to prompt thousands upon thousands of people to take
to the street. ... [But] if he loses control of that force, it
can be used against him."
Particularly worrisome is a militant faction of Préval
supporters including armed slum gangs that had served as Aristide's
private militia. Hard-core Aristide supporters want Préval
to let the former president return from exile in South Africa,
a move opposed by the United States, France and Canada, all major
donors to this cash-strapped nation.
One strand within Préval's base wants to "keep things
in chaos, keep things up in the air, so that Aristide will be
the only solution," Carney said.
In interviews with Newsday before the elections, Préval
said Haiti's constitution allows any citizen to return, but made
it clear he wasn't seeking Aristide's repatriation. He bristled
at the notion of ties to gangs, saying: "I don't know those
people."
He also proudly noted he is the only lawfully elected president
in Haiti's history to peacefully transfer power to an elected
successor.
Préval already is building confidence among foreign countries
and investors with a platform that combines free-market economics
with social and educational programs.
"We want this government to succeed," said U.S. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice.
But political analysts wonder whether the world's traditionally
fickle interest in Haiti will last.
"The international community knows how to organize elections,"
said Dan Erikson, a Caribbean expert with the Inter-American Dialogue,
a Washington think tank. "But it's not good at sticking around
to build functioning democratic institutions."
From:http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/world/ny-wohait194635514feb21,0,7618371.story?coll=ny-leadworldnews-headlines
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