After a long meeting on Wednesday December 9, the Group of Eight (G8) reaffirmed its unified stance to the current crisis, putting forward a list of clear postulates: yes to an independent investigative commission, no to a December 27 second round, and Martelly must leave office at the end of his term on February 7, 2016. G8 members Sauveur Pierre-Étienne and Steven Benoît said that the group is favourable to Evans Paul staying on as Prime Minister in the interim, if necessary.
The statement of unity came after tensions emerged when LAPEH coordinator Jean Hector Anacasis claimed that all 7 other presidential candidates in the G8 were prepared to support Jude Célestin in the second round. Pitit Dessalines candidate Moise Jean-Charles clarified on the radio that while he and Célestin were allies in the fight for democratic rights, he could not support the LAPEH candidate. since his party was fighting for the “economic independence” of Haiti, while Célestin was allied with elements of “the traditional economic elite that has held the country hostage for over 200 years.”
On December 10, International Human Rights Day, thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, protesting against “electoral impunity.” Marking the sixty-seventh anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, activists called on the President and the CEP to respect the civil and political laws. They demanded the respect of the people’s “right to vote” and the establishment of an independent investigation commission. Pierre Espérance of RNDDH (National Human Rights Defense Network) was unequivocal in his assessment of the current situation, denouncing President Martelly as “an apprentice dictator.”
SOFA
(Solidarity of Haitian Women) also took
to the streets demanding the respect
for women’s civil and political rights. It was only in 1950 that women were granted
the right to vote in the Haitian Constitution. 65 years later, they are still
an underrepresented and marginalized political group, despite mandatory
quotas. SOFA called for an end to impunity
and decried the CEP’s attempt to hide the scale of electoral violence, not
least President’s Martelly’s verbal abuse of a female citizen earlier this
year, during a campaign event in Miragoâne (Nippes Department).
A
G8-led march to the CEP headquarters on December 5 was broken
up by police with tear gas and water
cannons. Several incidents of vandalism occurred at the end of the
demonstration, leading organizers to cancel a planned December 7 strike out of concern
that pro-government infiltrators would instigate violence.
Kenneth
Merten, the U.S. State Department’s Special Coordinator for Haiti, visited the
country from December 3 to December 9 in an attempt to broker a resolution to
the electoral crisis. Merten, a former U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, is said
to have met with Jude Celestin and Jovenel Moïse, as well as human rights
groups and the business sector. Yet despite the American envoy’s visit
and multiple assurances of U.S. support for “honest and inclusive elections,” a
resolution of the electoral crisis still seems far away, with civil society
organizations calling
his trip “a failure.”
U.S.
involvement in the elections has been widely criticized
in Haiti. In an earlier interview
with The Tico Times, Merten claimed
that “this is a Haitian election,” and was hesitant to publicly take a stand: “We’re
in a ‘damned if you do, damned if you don’t’ position. ... We can’t say the
elections were great and the outcome was perfect because we don’t know yet. It
would be premature for us, in my view, to prejudge this election as terrific or
awful until we see this process run its course.”
On
Saturday, December 5, the Electoral Councillor Jacceus Joseph confirmed
that “the results published by the CEP do not correspond with the reality of
the ballot box,” echoing earlier accusations of fraud made by civil society
organizations. The
Group of Eight (G8), human
rights’ activists, the Haitian-American diaspora
and professional networks such as the National
Lawyers Guild - International Association of Democratic Lawyers
have all condemned the recent elections, pointing to the low voter turn-out,
widespread fraud, and other procedural irregularities. His visit to the Vote
Tabulation Center allowed him to uncover the evidence and expose the scale of
the problem, though he has yet to provide details.
Two
religious groups recently added their voices to the large number of sectors
denouncing widespread fraud and electoral irregularities in the October
election. The
Bishops of the Catholic Church called
on the CEP to investigate the fraudulent results and to apply the electoral
laws to guarantee a level of credibility of the electoral process. The
Conference of the Haitian Pastors called
the publication of tainted results an act of “high treason.”
On December 7, the National Coordination of
Demobilized Soldiers declared that their members were impatiently
awaiting their integration into the newly revived
Haitian Army.
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