Haitians protest election results - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:31 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Haitians protest election results

Haitians set fires and take to the barricades as thousands of people protest the results of the country's presidential election.

Violent clashes reported in Port-au-Prince

Residents run amid protests in Port-au-Prince on Wednesday. ((Kena Betancur/Reuters) )

Haitians set fires, took to barricadesand sparred with UN peacekeepers on Wednesday as thousands of people protested the results of the country's presidential election.

Furious protesters in the capital, Port-au-Prince, were reported to have set fire to the headquarters of the ruling Unity Party, the centre of the campaign ofgovernment-backed candidate Jude Clestin.

Haiti's Radio Kiskeya said in an unconfirmed report that at least four demonstrators were killed three in Les Cayes, about 190 kilometres west of Port-au-Prince in the country's southern peninsula, and one in the northern city of Cap-Haitien

The violence also forced the closure of Haiti's international airport.American Airlines had cancelled all flights in and out of the capitalwhen airport employees were unable to get to work Wednesday because of demonstrations, spokeswoman Martha Pantin said. Flights will also be cancelled Thursday.

ELECTION REACTION

On-the-ground updates out of Port-au-Princearecomingfast and furious on Twitter. Among the prolific users of the micro-blog writing about the aftermath from the electoral commission's announcement Tuesday were:

@emilytroutman, a writer, photographer and UN citizen ambassadorin the city.

@melindayiti, Melinda Miles, a U.S.activist who observed the election and is re-tweeting various colleagues.

@craigkielburger, aCanadian activist who is in Haiti on a project.

@carelpedre, a popular radio host who has expressed support for presidential hopeful Michel Martelly.

@haitinewsnet, for general information.

@jacquiecharles,a Miami Herald reporter.

Theleading candidates also have a presence on Twitter. Jude Clestin's camp( @judecelestin10) is fairly active online. Questions aroseafter a tweet was posted Tuesday, hours before the electoral commission released results, saying Clestin was headed to the run-off vote.

The other run-off contender, Mirlande Manigat, tweets infrequently in French and Creole at @mirlandemanigat. The wife of a formerpresident has also been quiet since election day. By comparison, Michel Martelly has been loud and vocal on an almost daily basis. His campaign tweets at @presidentmickyand his supporters are also active Twitter users, including his cousin, Richard Morse, or @ramhaiti.

By Amber Hildebrandt, CBCNews.ca

"[Protesters have]got barricades all around the city," CBC's Connie Watson reported. "You can't move in a vehicle. You can only getaround in a moto-taxiorby foot, and that is becoming a very dangerous proposition."

Watson said big chunks of concrete littered many roads Wednesday,and only pedestrians or motorbikescould pick their way through the debris.

In anational radio address, Haitian President Ren Prval urged the presidential candidates in the Nov. 28 voteto get their supporters to halt the protests.

"This is not how the country is supposed to work," Prval said. "People are suffering because of all this damage."

Demonstrators threw rocks at UN peacekeepers Indian and Pakistani soldiers working together who responded with tear gas.

The protests firsterupted Tuesday after the provisional electoral council said none of thecandidates had won an outrightmajority in the first round of voting. A run-off vote is expectedon Jan. 16.

Manigat at 31%

Mirlande Manigat, a professor and wife of a former president,claimed 31 per cent of the votes, followed by Clestin, with 22 per cent, officials said.

Michel Martelly, a popular musician also known as Sweet Micky, came in just behind Clestin with slightly more than 21 per cent.

In aradio broadcast Wednesday afternoon,Martelly called for non-violent protests, but he warned his supporters to beware of "infiltrators" who may try to incite violence.

"Demonstrating without violence is the right of the people," he said. "I will be with you until the bald-head victory."

Prval defended the results of the vote, brushing aside suggestions the vote had been marred by fraud.

It's not clear whether Martelly will be allowed to join the top two candidates on the ballot in the run-off vote.

The election was marred by reports of fraud and blatant ballot-box stuffing, and many of the 19 presidential candidates had called for the vote to be cancelled.

Concerns about the vote centred around conflicts between the announced results and those reported recently by a local election monitoring group financed by the European Union the National Observation Council.

"A peaceful solution to the current situation is crucial not only to confront the cholera epidemic in the short-term but also to create the conditions in the medium term for recovery and development from the earthquake," said a statement issued by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

A tire is rolled into a burning set of tires on a street during a protest in Port-au-Prince on Wednesday. ((Kena Betancur/Reuters) )

Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon on Wednesday addressed the Canadian government's concerns about the outbreak of violence in Haiti and the perceived flaws in the election.

Cannon said the Canadian ambassador to Haiti met with Prval on Wednesday morning to raise theissue of election irregularities and to urge calm.

The U.S. Embassy in Haiti published a statement Tuesday expressing concern about the results and calling for calm.

"The United States,together with Haitis international community partners, stands ready to support efforts to thoroughly review irregularities in support of electoral results that are consistent with the will of the Haitian people expressed in their votes, " the statement said.

Haiti is trying to contain a deadly cholera outbreak that has claimed more than 2,000 lives,and the country isstill struggling to rebuild after a powerful earthquake in January.

With files from The Canadian Press and The Associated Press