Second-round presidential and legislative runoffs, scheduled
for Sunday January 24, were abruptly
cancelled on Friday, less than 48 hours before polls were to open. Ruling-party
backed Jovenel Moise was set to face off against Jude Celestin, who had pledged
to boycott the race. Protests against the election increased throughout the
week, culminating in a massive demonstration that made its way to the
headquarters of the electoral council (CEP) on Friday morning.
“Jan. 24 is no longer opportune for having elections
considering the threats against the electoral infrastructure and on the
population who would have to go vote,” said
CEP president Pierre Louis Opont in cancelling the election.
But if the threat of violence provided the necessary
pretext, the writing was already on the wall. Since fraud and
irregularity-marred first-round presidential elections in October (and really,
since the violent August legislative elections), a growing chorus of Haitian
civil society had spoken out against the continuation of the electoral process
as is. An evaluation commission, created by the president, found
that only eight percent of tally sheets were free from irregularities or
manipulation.
“It is crazy to see that it was contemplated to hold a round
in these conditions,” on January 24, said a western official working on
election-related matters.
The nine-member electoral council had already seen two
members resign and two more suspend their activities (one due to corruption
allegations). But on Friday, as calls for the election’s cancellation increased
and officials frantically rushed to reach a deal, another CEP member threatened
to resign. It would have left the institution without a quorum, rendering it
unable to legally sign off on election results.
Still, the large demonstration on Friday sent a message,
particularly to the international backers of the election. Donors have financed
the bulk of the $100 million electoral process, with the U.S. alone chipping in
more than $30 million. Despite months of fraud allegations and calls from civil
society, the so-called “Core Group,” consisting of the major foreign embassies,
the United Nations and the Organization of American States (OAS) had continued
to insist on the completion of the electoral process on the 24th. “A
few days ago some diplomats questioned the capacity of the opposition to
mobilize,” the western official said, “obviously it does not look good now that
they are on the streets.”
International actors have denounced the violent protests and
called for the electoral process to be completed as soon as possible. The U.S.
State Department spokesperson Mark Toner, said it “expects
that persons responsible for organizing, financing, or participating in
electoral intimidation and violence will be held accountable in accordance with
Haitian law.”
There had been signs that some within the diplomatic
community were reluctant to push forward with an election that would lack
credibility. Earlier in the week, the OAS
issued a statement acknowledging flaws in the process and that corrective
measures “have not achieved the intended level of confidence.” With Martelly
digging his heels in and conflicts on the streets increasing, the “Core Group” issued
a statement Friday morning, for the first time making no mention of January
24 or February 7, and calling on all sides to dialogue. It was an implicit
rejection of moving forward with the election.
In an interview
with Le Monde, after the elections cancellation, the head of the OAS electoral
observation mission and former Brazilian foreign minister, Celso Amorim, acknowledged,
“behind the security concerns, there are also important political issues.” An
election with one candidate, he said, “would not have been accepted by the
majority.”
Amorim said that Haitians “must choose the best path, have a
real negotiation without external interference.” But, Amorim also warned: “What
I can say is that leaving a power vacuum for too long is dangerous.”
Just days earlier, backroom
negotiations, spearheaded by powerful private sector actors and religious
leaders, were on the cusp of a deal. But on Thursday morning, a combative
Martelly took to the airwaves, doubling down on his insistence that elections
take place and accusing his opponents of wanting to seize power by delaying
elections.
“Martelly wanted to push for the 24th to get a
compromise,” the western official said. But with CEP’s announcement and
declining international support, Martelly’s hand was undercut. “Of course,
Martelly is weaker now for dragging this out,” a presidential advisor said,
adding that Martelly “misunderstood” the support of the U.S. and others in the
international community. A member of parliament, speaking
to Haitian daily Le Nouvelliste,
said “now January 24th, its over. The negotiations are for after
February 7 and a new date for elections.”
But those close to the president contend that a deal would not
have been accepted by all of the groups in the streets. Martelly is “negotiating
his own surrender to people who don’t trust one another. So he’s between a proverbial
rock and a hard place,” the presidential advisor commented.
Jocelerme Privert, the president of the newly installed
Senate, who has quickly become one of the most influential Haitian politicians
in the current crisis, has urged any dialogue to include more voices. “There
was a weakness on the number of players involved” in previous discussions,
Privert told
John-Michel Caroit of Le Monde. “The solution that will emerge will
not be unanimous, but to succeed there must be a critical mass of people who
adhere to it.”
The election’s cancellation, however, has emboldened
opposition groups, some of whom are now openly
calling for Martelly to leave office before the end of his term. It has
also highlighted other divisions within the opposition. Some groups would be
more willing to accept reforms to the electoral apparatus before moving forward
while others are insisting on a further investigation into the fraud from
earlier rounds – opening the door to changing the runoff candidates or
rerunning the presidential election entirely.
International officials have supported moving forward while
keeping the same runoff candidates. After unflinchingly backing the process, U.S.
State Department Special Coordinator Ken Merten has since acknowledged the new
reality. "We may be looking at some sort of temporary solution until there
is a handover to a new elected president,” he told
Reuters, indicating that Martelly would step down on February 7. But,
Merten added, “Our fear is that we go into a situation that is open ended.”
Further delays or investigations could reveal deeper
problems with the elections, which could look bad for those who backed the
process, both financially and politically. Any further investigation also
raises the possibility of excluding the ruling-party candidate, opening the
door to the runoff for Moïse Jean-Charles, “whom they [the international
community] dread,” as a source told
Le Nouvelliste last month.
Jean-Charles, a former ally of twice-ousted former president Jean Bertrand
Aristide, finished third in the October vote.
In response to the election’s cancellation and the large
turnout of opposition protesters, pro-government supporters have begun
mobilizing throughout the country. They are calling for elections as soon as
possible and have raised concerns of violent confrontations between the two
groups. "If Jovenel is excluded from the elections, there will be a civil
war," one protester told
the AFP.
In the Grand-Anse, a sparsely populated department in southwestern
Haiti, former paramilitary leader Guy Philippe, a front runner in
second round senatorial elections that had been scheduled for the 24th,
threatened, “we are
ready for war…We will divide the country."
Philippe helped lead the 2004 coup against former president
Jean Bertrand Aristide and is still listed as a fugitive
by the DEA, wanted on drug-trafficking and money laundering charges. Last
month he endorsed Martelly’s successor, Moise, and appeared at a campaign rally
in his home region. Legislative
elections in Philippe’s department were some of the most problematic in August,
resulting in partial reruns in October that have yet to be settled.
Regardless of what happens with presidential elections, the deeply
flawed legislative race appears set to stand, with its members playing an
increasingly larger role in the current crisis. 24 of the 30 members of the
senate have been sworn in, along with 92 of the 119 deputies in the lower
house. Martelly allies won control over the lower house, but the senate
presidency went to Privert, a former minister under Aristide and current
representative of former-president Rene Preval’s political coalition. Privert
is one of 10 elected officials who remained in office after Martelly failed to
hold elections his first four years in power. Some opposition groups, however,
have urged the recent legislative elections to also be scrapped.
Privert said he was “working with my colleagues” and was
meeting with many “Haitian organizations “and “some diplomats” in order to
solve the crisis. As negotiations continue for what comes after February 7, all
sides are jostling for power and influence.
Prime Minister Evans Paul told the press that Martelly would
be willing to step down on February 7, but others close to the president have
suggested he could stay to hand over the presidential sash to his successor
after new elections are held. Who who would take the reigns of government if
Martelly does step down, however, remains a sticking point in negotiations. According
to sources close to the negotiations, one option would have current Prime
Minister Evans Paul stay on through the transition.
Paul became de facto prime minister in 2015, as he was never
ratified by parliament, whose terms had recently expired. The political deal
that brought Paul to office was brokered by many of the same actors involved in
current negotiations, including the U.S., private sector groups and the
Catholic Church. Though the agreement led to the current electoral process, it
failed to ensure systemic changes that could lead to its credibility.
As negotiations drag out and street protests continue, the
international community is tightly managing the fall out. For the last dozen
years, explains Haitian poet Lyonel Trouillot, “all Haitian political decisions
are made practically under the diktat of this nebula that is called the
international community."
A military presence under U.N. auspices has been in the
country since the 2004 coup, backed by the U.S., France and others. The U.N. troops,
responsible for a cholera epidemic that has killed nearly 10,000 and numerous
sexual abuse cases, are reviled by many Haitians but seen as a political
necessity by international actors and many among the economic elite in Haiti. Billions
of dollars have been spent on the mission, whose mandate includes political
stability and security.
After directly intervening in the 2010 election and
overturning the results, ensuring Martelly’s ascension to the presidency,
international officials had hoped that a successful transfer of power at the
end of his term could facilitate the departure of the politically and
financially costly U.N. mission. In early October the mission’s mandate was
extended by one, “possible final” year. The head of the mission, Sandra Honore,
told the Security
Council that an assessment would be conducted “after completion of the
electoral cycle” to determine its future.
“Investing $ 100 million for elections that do not lead to
political stability, it is wasteful,” Senate president Privert
said. “Too bad the representatives of the international community have
understood too late, we could have avoided many acts of violence.”
Ricardo Seitenfus, the OAS representative who blew
the whistle on international intervention in the 2010 election, believes
the Haiti electoral schedule was designed with U.S. politics in mind.
"Since Mrs. Clinton was well involved in the 2010-2011 decisions, if we started badly, we must end well. That is to say, February 7 President Michel Martelly must leave, and (Haiti) should have a new president," Seitenfus said on local radio.
"Since Mrs. Clinton was well involved in the 2010-2011 decisions, if we started badly, we must end well. That is to say, February 7 President Michel Martelly must leave, and (Haiti) should have a new president," Seitenfus said on local radio.
“If I have any advice to give to the international
community,” Seitenfus continued, “it is to listen to Haitian actors. Without a
Haitian solution to the Haitian crisis, there is no salvation.”
Any deal must first a foremost provide for a credible and
fair election, one that can restore Haitian’s trust in their political system.
In the October elections, only a quarter of registered voters participated, a
sign of the deep distrust in an electoral process seen as dominated by the
international community, unaccountable politicians and their elite backers.
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