It is during our darkest moments that we must focus to see the light

Mwen se echantiyon yon ras kap boujonnen men ki poko donnen

Si vous voulez vous faire des ennemis essayer de changer les choses

Showing posts with label John Kerry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Kerry. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Haiti Elections 2016 : Le décret electoral un chef d'œuvre contre les voleurs d'élections par Stanley Lucas

Depuis 1995 il y a toujours eu des manipulations des procès verbaux par le CEP ou des BCEN pour manipuler les résultats des élections. Ceci, particulièrement au niveau des résultats des Législatives. Souvent des BCEN partisans sont conçus exprès, afin d’éliminer sans critères des procès verbaux valables de manière à favoriser certains candidats au détriment d'autres qui ont effectivement gagné les élections. Le champion de cette pratique a été le CEP de Gaillot Dorsinvil au profit de l'INITE en 2010. Il faut aussi dire que durant cette période des avocats qui ont des connections avec leurs confrères nommes dans les BCEN profitent pour faire leur beurre.

Seul le CEP est habilité à publier les résultats officiels, mais…
Cette fois il sera pratiquement impossible de le faire à cause de deux choses. La première, l'article 169 du décret électoral qui stipule qu'une fois que le procès verbal est prêt au niveau de chaque bureau de vote, la copie bleue est plaquée sur le mur d'entrée de ce bureau. Cela veut dire que le résultat est immédiatement public et peut être utilisé par n'importe qui pour présenter les tendances de vote de l'électorat, malgré ce que dit le CEP dans son communique No. 17. Leur seul point valable, seul le CEP est habilité à publier les résultats officiels. Dimanche soir, quand les radios du pays ont utilisé l'article 169 pour relayer les résultats plaqués devant chaque bureau de vote, les journalistes ont rendu service à la démocratie et à la transparence des élections, en rendant la tache des manipulateurs presqu'impossible.


 Il n'y a que les putschistes qui voulaient le black-out sur les tendances de vote pour dérailler a l'aide de la propagande politique sans preuve cette belle fête électorale. Ces putschistes aigris et frustrés sont depuis lors à la recherche de la violence. La disponibilité de ces données au grand public rend toute tentative de coup d'Etat électoral quasiment impossible. En ce sens, pour rendre service à la démocratie, la presse doit continuer a présenter les tendances du vote. Cet exercice forcera aussi les médias à mieux s'organiser pour les soirées électorales futures. Cela veut dire trouver des sponsors leur permettant de déployer des correspondants dans le maximum de bureaux de vote, recruter des statisticiens, des avocats et des experts en sciences politiques pour une meilleure présentation au public et couverture de la soirée électorale comme cela se fait aux Etats Unis par exemple. Il faut donner credit a la presse qui a joue un rôle important dans la réussite des opérations électorales de Dimanche. A cause de cette contribution constructive nombreux sont les journalistes et les stations de radios qui reçoivent des menaces du parti Fanmi Lavalas.

​La seconde, c'est la publication de ces mêmes procès verbaux, les versions originales,  sur le site internet du CEP sont disponibles. Ce fait rend pratiquement impossible aux voleurs des BCEN d'éliminer des procès verbaux sans des critères clairement définis par les membres du CEP. L'élection du 20 Novembre semble marquer un pas positif vers l'institutionnalisation des élections en Haiti.


Après la fermeture des bureaux électoraux

La collecte des données le jour des élections forcera aussi les partis politiques et leurs candidats à mieux s'organiser. Comme on le sait, après la fermeture des bureaux de vote, on procède au comptage et à la signature des procès-verbaux par les membres des bureaux de votes et les mandataires. Une copie du procès verbal est remise aux mandataires des deux candidats ayant reçu le plus de votes. Dimanche 20 Novembre, 135.000 mandataires représentant les partis et les candidats étaient déployés. La présence de ces mandataires s’est répartie ainsi : PHTK: 72%, Fanmi Lavalas: 54%, Pitit Dessalines: 39%, LAPEH: 35%, Renmen Ayiti: 19%. Les représentations des autres partis et candidats étaient totalement insignifiants. Ceci dit travaillons a la concrétisation de ce processus qui a débuté depuis 2015.

Èske UNICEF ap pwoteje timoun ak demokrasi nan peyi Dayiti ? pa Stanley Lucas

Ayiti siyen Konvansyon Dwa Timoun. Sa vle di ke Ayiti dwe respekte dwa timoun. Ayiti dwe respekte tou plizyè lòt Konvansyon entènasyonal ke li siyen. Sa vle di respekte
1. Chat Demokratik Amerik la ki te siyen nan OEA
2. Konvansyon Entèameriken Dwa Moun
3. Deklarasyon Inivèsèl Dwa moun

Radyo Timoun : pawòl pwazon
Annou konsidere jan radio Lavalas la ki se radio Timoun ak jan chimè Aristide yo ap fè pwomosyon violans, ap menase jounalis, boule, kraze, brize. Pawòl Lavalas nan Radyo Timoun fè nou sonje kijan o Rwanda, Radyo 1000 Collines te chofe yon bann moun na mas pèp la, pou voye yo al masakre Tutsi yo. Non sèlman Aristide ak Lavalas vyole konstitisyon e lwa peyi Dayiti men oganizasyon ki montre klèman ke li se yon oganizasyon kriminèl kap vyole tou 4 konvansyon entènasyonal sa yo ke nou wè la a. Men 3 pwèv ki montre pratik violans radio Timoun ak Lavalas nan peyi Dayiti depi 20 Novam nan aswè:

A. 22 Novembre 9pm: Pou tande pwomosyon violans Lavalas nan radyo timoun klike la: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjF3_yKL8KQ&feature=youtu.be

B. 20 Novembre 9pm: Pou tande pwomosyon violans Lavalas nan radyo timoun, klike la a : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yW0JtZrXdM4&feature=youtu.be


C. 21 et 22 Novembre Lavalas menasse pou li touye plizyè jounalis e boule plizyè radyo. Klike la:  http://equilibreur.info/2016/11/22/liliane-pierre-paul-et-dautres-journalistes-sur-une-liste-noire-de-fanmi-lavalas-selon-sos-journalistes/

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Will OAS Secretary General support Privert’s coup in Haiti?

On June 14, the 120-day term of Haiti’s Provisional President Jocelerme Privert officially ended. Haiti’s constitution explicitly prohibits an extension or a new mandate (Articles 98.3 and 134.3). Both the Legislative and the Judicial Branch have acknowledged the Presidential vacancy. The Interamerican Human Rights Commission has done the same. Yet Privert illegally hangs on to the Presidency.

Since June 15, like Alberto Fujimori in Peru, Privert is attempting a coup (autogolpe). He is using state institutions, violence, threats, intimidation, and corruption against the Legislative and Judicial Branches of Government as well against his political opponents to desperately cling to power. On June 21, the National Assembly was attacked Privert chimere’s who threw rocks and fired guns at the building and exiting representatives to thwart their attempts to set forth a process to fill the Presidency. Senator Jean Renel Senatus and Deputies Romel Bauge and Rony Celestin – all leading efforts to unseat the illegal President -- escaped assassination attempts. Celestin is the majority leader of the Chamber of Deputies. Eleven political opponents have been killed and 15 had their houses and/or businesses burned to the ground, including the business of Anne Valerie Timothee the President of opposition PHTK party, former President Martelly’s political party.

These tactics are consistent with Privert’s violent record which includes masterminding the massacres in Raboteau and La Scierie when he was Minister of the Interior from 2002 -04, according to human rights reports and the Haitian judicial system. His 120-day track record as Provisional President was a complete failure. His one task was to organize free and fair elections, which are nowhere on the horizon.

Parliament through a National Assembly should replace Privert to facilitate the finalization of the 2015 elections. But, first Privert needs to give back the Presidential sash and vacate the National Palace. Without that, the country is heading to more conflict and instability


This is the context in which OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro -- influenced by Privert’s special envoy and behind the scene by Sandra Honore, head of MINUSTAH and former Chief of Staff of OAS Assistant Secretary General -- issued a communique on July 15 putting pressure on the Haitian parliament instead of delegitimizing Privert’s coup. How can the OAS support an illegitimate provisional President organizing a coup in Haiti in violation of the Democratic Charter and Haiti’s constitution while undermining parliament? How can the Interamerican Human Rights Commission understand that Privert’s term ended leaving a Presidential vacuum and not the Secretary General?  If the OAS is a champion of democracy and cares about Haiti’s political stability, they will condemn Privert’s coup and encourage elections.

Friday, June 17, 2016

Can Haitian Stop the Rise of Yet Another Dictator? by Stanley Lucas

The term of Haitian Provisional President Jocelerme Privert ended on June 14. At the opening of the General Session of Haiti’s parliament, the General Assembly confirmed and announced that the mandate of Provisional President Privert was over on June 14. They took the same action at the conclusion of President Michel Martelly’s term on February 7. On June 17, the Judiciary issued a statement also confirming his term was over on June 14 and stating that they do not recognize his authority.

Yet, Privert delivered a speech on June 15 announcing he would remain in office as the interim president in order to maintain stability. Violence has ensued as Haiti heads down the well-trod path of another dictator.

His actions will accomplish anything but stability. In his 120 days in office, Privert failed in his sole mission: organize democratic elections. His mandate was to organize runoff Presidential elections on April 24 so that a new democratically elected President could assume office on May 14. 

Rather than organize the elections, he spent the 120 days using partisan tactics to organize a coup on behalf of his – and former dictator Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s – Lavalas party. It became apparent early in his term that elections were not forthcoming and that this delay tactic would be implemented.

So what is the official process? At the end of Privert’s 120 day term, parliament has the responsibility to replace Privert. The Prime Minister and the cabinet assume a caretaker role for the government. In February, when Martelly departed office as scheduled, it took the Parliament a week to select a provisional President. Parliament has already initiated a set of political consultations to replace Mr. Privert, and, to ensure that non-elected officials do not decide the fate of the country, they have ordered the Prime Minister not to undertake any decisions beyond the daily functioning of the government until parliament ratifies the next steps. This is an automatic process.

The Judiciary also called for a meeting between the three branches of Government, the Prime Minister as the representative of the Executive Branch, the two representatives of the Legislative Branch, the President of the House and the Vice President of the Senate and the President of the Council of Judicial Powers in the perspective to find a solution in case of Privert continue to undermine quorum to prevent the General Assembly in parliament.

But instead of respecting any of Haiti’s institutions, Mr. Privert has decided to make a power grab and remain in office. This sets him up as the defacto President – an action that will most certainly not be tolerated by the Haitian voters.

Privert ignored the Parliament’s order and called for them to take action to extend his term in office. Meanwhile, he is working actively to undermine and dissolve parliament. He has ensured that several senators will not sit for quorum so that the senate is unable to take legal action. The deputies are less amenable to his agenda and are therefore being threatened. Deputy Romel Beauge was already the subject to heavy machine gun fire at his home, and Deputy Price Cyprien President of the Justice Commission was attacked by Privert's personal security.

In anticipation of the coming protests, Privert has imposed a curfew, arrested democratic activists, fired machine guns at the KID party headquarters of Evans Paul, and threatened other political activists. After failing to secure arms shipments from Venezuela and Cuba, he and his acolyte ransacked a National Police walking off with 75 Galil automatic rifles. Those rifles have already been distributed to the so-called chimeres – or hired guns -- working for him.

Around the country Privert’s new Delege local representatives of the President’s office and Commissaire du Gouvernement, local prosecutors, are conducting systematic repression in order to secure the coup. They attacked TV Plurielle because the owner publicly characterized Privert’s inner circle as “scary” in reference to their abysmal track records of human rights violations and violence.

Privert has a history of defaulting to violence when the political winds do not blow his way. In 2004, according to human rights and Haitian justice system records while serving as Minister of the Interior, he was involved in the Raboteau massacre in Gonaives and Lascierie in Saint Marc resulting in the murder of about 85 people.

Before Haiti suffers another Privert sponsored and executed bloodbath, action must be taken. In case of a stalemate the Haitian people will almost certainly take action to prevent the rise of yet another Haitian dictator. What will the international response be? That is one of the critical and decisive factors yet unknown.




Sunday, February 7, 2016

Haiti: No President – What’s Next? by Stanley Lucas

The term of President Michel Martelly ended today, February 7. Because the Constitution does not provide a process for power transition when elections are not finalized, Haitian political and international actors have convened for the past two weeks to discuss how to move forward given the power vacuum. Several scenarios were on the table: an agreement among the three branches of government that Martelly remain in office, like former President Preval did in 2011, to complete the elections (despite calls of the opposition to ouster him); install the non partisan President of the Supreme Court or a judge of this court, as was done successfully under the 1990 and 2006 electoral crises; or, have the Prime Minister (or a newly appointed Prime Minister) oversee a three month transition. Various political parties and organizations put forward another 28 proposals for the transition each of them with their own Provisional President and Prime Minister.

Given the Haitian’s political parties inability to reach a consensus on a path forward on their own, the Organization of American States (OAS) sent a mission to Haiti last week to facilitate a dialogue among political actors for the transition and finalize the elections. Some of the actors wanted a coup. An agreement was brokered and the implementation starts today. The agreement includes:                  
       1.     President farewell speech in parliament (Feb. 7)
       2.     Parliament will acknowledge the void of the Presidency (Feb. 7)
       3.     Parliament will inform the Haitian people about how a Provisional President will be selected (Feb.7)
       4.     Parliament will name a bicameral commission to work on the selection process; citizens will be able to submit their names to the commission (Feb. 7)
       5.     Parliament will vote for a new Provisional President (TBD)
       6.     After the new President is sworn in, s/he:
a. Confirm the current Prime Minister of consensus or name a new one
            b. Write to various sectors of Haitian society, in accordance with Article 289 of the   
            Constitution, to form a new Provisional Electoral Council in order to organize the runoff of the elections on April 24 – the date set by the agreement under the auspices of OAS and the Democratic Charter (Feb. 11)

Without disciplined implementation, this agreement has the potential to lead Haiti into permanent instability. If parliament chooses a politician instead of a non-partisan Supreme Court judge, Haiti is in for trouble. Undoubtedly, a politician who becomes President overnight without the vote of the people will try to stay in power for at least three years by annulling the elections, dissolving parliament and changing the constitution. Historically, Supreme Court Judges have always followed the laws and the Constitution to the letter and eschewed partisan politics. Several political leaders are hesitant about the President of the Supreme Court because they claim he has a family relationship with Jude Celestin, one of the candidates qualified for the runoff. This is unverified.

Meanwhile sectors linked to political violence are taking advantage of the power vacuum by creating an unstable environment in order to seize power. Aristide sent into the streets two different types of operators. First, his main spokeperson, Gerald Gilles, has been vocally advocating that Aristide should be provisional President. They know clearly that the Constitution precludes him from serving another term because he has already served two. Second, the presence of members of Haiti’s disbanded army in the streets of Port-au-Prince two days ago fueled the fire. Aristide tried to take advantage of this situation by disguising his chimeres (violent political operators from the Lavalas party) as former military during their attack on a transfer banks and a police precinct in the town of Arcahaie, 30km from Port-au-Prince. 

Aristide historically has used these chimeres to carry out kidnapping and drug trafficking in order to finance the party. Most of these actors have been apprehended by the US Drug Enforcement Agency and tried in the US. According to various testimonies from Arcahaie the person linked to this attack is a chimere named Pa Bouke. The goal was to create more tension between the populace and the members of the disbanded army. Martelly, for the past four years, has refused to include the members of the disbanded army into the country’s new defense force oriented toward reconstruction. In the upcoming days, the country should expect in to see similar violent actions from the Aristide camp. In the face of the heightened violence, MINUSTAH, the UN mission in Haiti, has been completely ineffective in maintaining security.

In addition to the violence, we are already seeing an increase in corruption and political pay offs. Since yesterday, there is an full scale assault on the newly convened parliament by the economic cartel known as the Groupe de Bourdon, former President Rene Preval, the drug cartels, Aristide and others – all trying to buy the presidency.  Preval like Aristide is constitutionally precluded. All those efforts toward the transition are weakened by a surfacing scandal involving the President of the Senate, Jocelerme Privert. Many around the country are calling for his removal because he falsified the amended constitution in 2009 according Haitian newspapers and radios who investigated the issue and is responsible for the La Scierie massacre in Saint Marc when he was Minister of the Interior.

Without support from the international community to isolate the perpetrators of violence and corruption from the system, this – or any – brokered agreement is doomed for failure and Haiti will slip back into chaos for a decade or more. The OAS should actually leverage the Democratic Charter and conduct an investigation identifying the damaging actors and remove them from the process. The OAS did this successfully in 2001 when Aristide’s Lavalas burned down political parties headquarters. They should also continue to foster the dialogue between the democratic actors willing to sit at the table and negotiate in good faith. And finally, they should ramp up their support for the electoral process by increasing technical assistance to the CEP and strengthening the electoral observation mission.


The situation is fragile and the stakes are very high. Haiti has some slight momentum in the past five years addressing the dire economic, political and social situation of the country. Yet the Haitian political system and Haitian political actors are unable to foster the democratic process on their own. To protect the people of Haiti, the international community will need to step in, yet again, to support democracy.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Haiti between the completion of the elections and a coup d’état by Stanley Lucas




Executive Summary
The following report is intended to provide a brief summary of the reasons for the breakdown of the most recent elections in Haiti. The breakdown is happening on several tracks:

·         First, one of the two Presidential candidates qualifying for the runoff is undermining the electoral process by publicly claiming that he will not participate in the runoff election. Yet, he has not formally submitted a letter to the Permanent Electoral Council (CEP) giving notice that he will not participate. Therefore, their hands are tied in organizing the runoff.

·         Second, a small faction of the opposition parties, led by former President Aristide’s Fanmi Lavalas party along with the head of the Pitit Dessalines party, Moise Jean Charles, are using violence and intense lobbying in Washington, DC to derail the elections and conduct a coup d'état against current President Michel Martelly. The solution for this small faction is to disengage from the democratic process and push for a transitional government, which would plunge Haiti into political instability for at least the next 15 years. This faction has scant support from the Haitian people and 90% of the people oppose the coup.

·        Finally, six of the nine members of the CEP have resigned as a result of the violence. By law, there must be five CEP members to organize an election (there are currently only three). A plan to reconstitute the CEP is being negotiated by the members of the opposition and others. Mr. Celestin is advocating a “reshuffling” of the CEP.

Meanwhile, other representatives of the opposition parties accompanied by the Administration and key influential leaders are advocating a three-part strategy to maintain stability and the democratic process: 1. While Martelly wants to leave on February 7 when his term expires, he should remain in office until elections can be organized, as was done in 2011 under Preval; 2. Install a new Prime Minister; and, 3. Reconstitute the CEP. The key question is: how to set up a process that is inclusive in spite of the refusal of Celestin and the small faction of the opposition to participate? The Permanent Council of the Organization of American States (OAS) has assembled a mission to facilitate dialogue and find consensus, but there are serious questions about their goals. Since 2014, they are also serious questions about MINUSTAH's role in supporting democratic institutions against violence.

This report concludes with recommendations on a potential path forward and recommendations for the role the international community can play to help support a peaceful and democratic resolution to Haiti’s latest electoral crisis.

Presidential and Legislative Elections
Haiti held Legislative Elections on Augusts 9 followed by elections for President and the Legislative runoff on October 25. The August 9 elections, which included 85 political parties, were characterized by administrative deficiencies, fraud, irregularities and violence. The CEP sanctioned the candidates and employees of the electoral machinery involved in the irregularities. The Presidential runoff elections were scheduled for December and then rescheduled for January 24. They were again postponed due to violence, and are still pending.

Extreme and Widespread Violence Stalls the Runoffs
A week before the runoff, Deputy Danton Leger, one of the spokespeople for former President Jean Bertrand Aristide’s Fanmi Lavalas party, called for the use of violence to stop the elections and threatened to kill voters if they turned out on January 24 (see: https://www.facebook.com/Tripothaitien/videos/620246711446887/ ). These calls were echoed by Andre Michel, a self-proclaimed radical leader, and Rony Timothe, a former Lavalas member and creator of the FOPARK grassroots movement associated with Pitit Dessalines. Given the country’s violent electoral history[1], these threats to stop the elections, intimidate voters and drive down turnout were taken seriously by Haitian society.

According to several sources in the targeted municipalities, on January 18, Lavalas operatives took to the streets burning cars, businesses and houses in downtown Port-au-Prince and indiscriminately beat innocent bystanders. Moise Jean Charles, a former Lavalas senator who is now the head of Pitit Dessalines, had his supporters burn down the Municipal Electoral Office in Milot. Heavily armed paramilitary-style commandos close to Lavalas and Pitit Dessalines ransacked and burned 15 municipal voting centers around the country destroying all ballots and electoral material. And, they burned the country’s public schools used by the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) as voting centers.

In Port-au-Prince, two organizations MOLEGHAF (associated with Lavalas) and FOPARK (associated with Pitit Dessalines), were the actual executers of the violence. Both organizations are considered anarchist movements that co-opt disaffected youth and use them to develop a culture of political violence to undermine any efforts to build democratic institutions. They reject rule of law and use violence to impose their will. Anyone opposed to their agenda is verbally and physically threatened. Timothee, the head of FOPARK, even ordered his commandos over the radio to kidnap the CEP President and called for the “necklacing”[2] of President Martelly.

In the face of the raging violence, the CEP issued a communiqué postponing the January 24 elections in order to protect the voters from the threatened carnage. The communiqué detailed the violence and electoral intimidation.

The October Elections – Where the Crisis Began with False Claims of Fraud
For the past four years, some opposition parties led by Moise Jean Charles and Lavalas employed various tactics to block the organization of the elections with the objective of taking control of Haiti’s electoral machinery and organizing an electoral coup. President Michel Martelly, by contrast, has consistently engaged the opposition reaching two major power-sharing agreements with the opposition parties in an effort to keep the democratic process on track. The first was on December 2014, which gave the opposition control of the Prime Minister’s Office and the Government. The second was in January 2015 giving the opposition control of the CEP. This bears repeating: President Martelly has given the opposition control of the Prime Minister’s Office and the CEP. A third agreement was also on the table. In order to keep checks and balances, Martelly offered to extend the senators term in office (as was done in 2011) in exchange for them to sit for quorum[3] and vote on the electoral law.

Of the nine members on the CEP, the body tasked with overseeing the entire electoral process, all are representatives of the opposition, including the faction of the opposition now undermining the electoral efforts. Martelly’s government did not name a single member of the CEP.

The CEP was composed of the following members:
1.     Marie Carmelle Austin, a former Aristide Education Minister
2.     Pierre Louis Opont, a member of Preval’s Inite party since 2010 (resigned)
3.     Jacceus Joseph, a founding member of the Pitit Dessalines party (resigned)
4.     Nehemie Joseph, and member of the opposition party MOPOD (resigned and replaced by Carline Viergelin)
5.     Yolette Mengual, former chief of staff to Lassegue, a former cabinet member of both Aristide and Preval (resigned)
6.     Pierre Manigat, former chief editor of the Nouvelliste, close to Groupe de Bourdon (resigned)
7.     Lourdes Edith Joseph, from a worker union sector close to the opposition
8.     Vijonet Demero from the protestant church, which fielded six presidential candidates (resigned and replaced)
9.     Ricardo Augustin, from the Catholic Church. Two presidential candidates were closely associated to the Catholic Church and one boycotted the entire electoral process. (resigned)
See their resignation letters: http://www.slideshare.net/stanleylucas

When they gained control of the CEP, the opposition agreed to cease their four-year effort to block elections and participate in the democratic process. Legislative elections were held on August 9, but they were a complete mess. From administrative breakdown to the efforts of 85 political parties to manipulate the process, these elections were poorly managed. Because of the technical and financial assistance provided by the international community along with security from the UN Mission, MINUSTAH, Secretary John Kerry paid a visit to Haiti on October 6 to investigate the situation and attempt to broker a resolution. After the implementation of a set of technical recommendations, the Presidential election was scheduled for October 25 along with runoff Legislative elections.  

On October 25, 54 candidates participated in the Presidential elections, including one from the ruling party PHTK. The elections were a success; turnout was good in comparison to seven previous elections. There was no violence, and the electoral machinery responded well. For the first time in Haiti’s rocky democratic history, there was not at single death on Election Day. Haitian Diaspora expressed support for the process. And, all national and international observers agreed that although there were some irregularities, there was no evidence of fraud, and the elections were acceptable.

Things turned sour the day after the elections. Several Presidential candidates – who had been informed they did not qualify for the runoff [4] took to the radio screaming allegations of fraud. Yet, they could not present any technical report or their tally sheets to prove the elections were rigged. In fact, 96% of these candidates got less than 1% of the vote. According to the Haitian Diaspora electoral observation mission, (NOAH)-HDP, all of their evidence is anecdotal. Further, not one single candidate crying foul officially registered a complaint under the process outlined by the electoral law. Because they had a savvy media strategy – in country and internationally – their unsubstantiated claims got some traction. The candidates took to the radio giving impassioned speeches about being robbed of their elections, and Aristide’s highly paid US lobbying team made sure the story was told in Washington and around the U.S. They were behind several press articles undermining the elections, making damaging claims against the government and advocating the installation of an unconstitutional transitional government – essentially a coup against Martelly.

According to the official results, two of the 54 candidates actually qualified for the runoff: Jovenel Moise (PHTK) with 32.81% of the vote, and Jude Celestin (LAPEH) with 25.27%. Of the 54 candidates, 45 received less than 1% of the vote. Only three candidates registered in the double digits. The third and fourth top vote getters -- Moise Jean Charles (Pitit Dessalines) at 14.27% and Maryse Narcisse (Fanmi Lavalas) at 7.05% -- continue to claim that they won although neither of them has formally contested the results. Instead, they have attempted to block the electoral process in order to install an unconstitutional transitional government.

Maryse Narcisse employed a clever political communications strategy by requesting to visit a tabulation center to evaluate 78 tally sheets she previously selected (out of a total 13,265 tally sheets). She claimed that those “randomly” selected tally sheets were all characterized by fraud. Her show gave Aristide lobbyists fodder to derail the elections by presenting evidence of fraud to Washington, DC community. Local and international election observers and the CEP swiftly and decisively debunked her story of the 78 tally sheets.

Celestin Says He’s Boycotting the Process
Despite qualifying for the runoff, Jude Celestin has publicly stated that he refuses to participate in the electoral process unless he gets full control of the CEP. After the election, he formally submitted his recommendations to the CEP and the Independent Electoral Evaluation Commission for how to move the process forward. The CEP took 70% of his recommendations, but they did not revamp the CEP. This appears to be his major sticking point as he’s advocated the “reshuffling” of the CEP.

Celestin was a presidential candidate in 2010; he finished third with 230,000 votes. This year, he squeaked into the runoff after paying for and hyping some favorable polling results. He was completely mute during the first round of the elections. He gave only one interview to radio Vision 2000, and avoided the presidential debate organized by the Haitian Press and the economic debate of the Haitian Chamber of Commerce. This was an attempt to emulate Rene Preval’s 2006 electoral strategy in which his muteness won him the election. But the political environment of the 2014-2016 elections was different. The electorate demanded answers on many key economic and social issues, but Celestin remained mute. For example, Celestin never addressed how he would address the precarious situation of 3.5 millions peasants who are suffering the impact of a six months drought. So when he saw his support was meager, Celestin got his wealthy friends from an economic cartel known as the Groupe de Bourdon to finance three favorable polls for him. In each of these polls, he registered 37% support. He then had three influential radio stations hype these favorable polls. As a result, he was able to capture an additional 164,000 votes to put him at 394,000 votes qualifying him as second place for the runoff elections. Without these polls, he would have been dead in the water.

About the Other Presidential Candidate – Jovenel Moise
Jovenel Moise (PHTK), the ruling party candidate, is the son of a farmer and a seamstress. He started his first commercial water project at age 23 with $500. Today, his water company is worth $4.5 million. He has also been a successful investor in Haiti’s agricultural sector. Jovenel borrowed money from a private bank to create a company call AGRITRANS. Under this company, he banded together 3,000 small banana farmers and made a commercial investment in their combined business. As a result, Haiti is exporting bananas to Germany for the first time in 54 years. AGRITRANS also sells 80 tons of bananas in the local markets. This investment today is worth $27 million. Because of his personal achievements and a good political communication strategy, Jovenel connected with the voters who call him the “Banana Man” for his ability to feed Haitians and return Haiti to the export economy glory. His campaign promise was that the vast majority migrant workers would have an opportunity under his Administration to return home and earn a descent living. Jovenel reminded the voters that it was because of Haiti’s agricultural production that the country could buy its freedom from the slavery of France in 1804. His message has put him far out in front of Celestin.

The other advantage for Jovenel Moise is Martelly’s 2010 electoral base that represents 700,000 votes. While not perfect, the government performance under Martelly has been a vast improvement over the previous 40 years. Martelly inherited a country where all state institutions collapsed after the January 12, 2010 earthquake where 320,000 lost their lives, $14 billion in infrastructure was lost and 1.6 million people were living in makeshift tents. Even before the earthquake, Haiti was in dire shape. Kidnappings ware rampant averaging 300 per month. Almost 70% of the national budget was dependent on foreign aid, Haiti was not on the tourism map. About 1.5 million kids could not go to school and 5.5 million people were living under absolute poverty. Today, 1.55 million people are out from under the tents. The education budget increased from 6.7 to 13%, and as a result, 1.4 million more kids have access to school, transportation and a meal per day. The social programs, including ti manman cherie, Aba Grangou and Ede Pep financially helped 1.5 million pregnant women and heads of family with several kids. On the security side, kidnapping went down from 300 to zero after massive efforts to professionalize the police. Investments in tourism have attracted 12 new hotels, including Marriott and Best Western, and bread and breakfasts. The Administration made important investments in infrastructure like roads, ports and airports necessary for economic development. Haiti also climbed the rankings on two important democratic indices: the world freedom of the press index on which Haiti is now 47 (next to the U.S. ranked 46), and the global corruption index where there was very slight progress moving up several spots to 161 out of 192 (it was previous one of the bottom three). To be sure, Haiti has a long way to go, but the voters have recognized that for the first time in generations, progress has been made.

An Independent Electoral Commission Evaluates the Fraud Claims
In the face of the fraud claims, the opposition demanded and received a Commission to evaluate the claims. The Commission was organized with three independent observers. The opposition contested the members of the Commission, but they went to work anyway and produced a report. The Commission concluded that they identified irregularities and some fraud, but those irregularities did not affect the results of the elections. They made a set of recommendations, and the government and CEP applied 75% of the Commission’s recommendations. They additionally incorporated most recommendations made by Jude Celestin in a letter sent to the commission.

In addition, there are two practical indicators that the opposition claims of fraud were false. The first is that the parties claiming fraud already had their senators and deputies elected in the August 9 and October 25 elections sworn into parliament. The House has 24 parties represented by 96 deputies and 11 parties by 16 senators in the senate. Generally speaking when a ruling party is stealing elections they steel 75 to 85% of parliament like Fanmi Lavalas did in the May 21, 2000 elections trying to build a one party system, or like during the Duvalier era when they controlled 99% of the single Chamber of Deputies.

A Coup Attempt for an unconstitutional transitional government
Incapable to win the elections even with the control of the CEP, the goal of the opposition now is to block the electoral process in order to implement a coup to take over the government without the consent of the people. The opposition has employed extreme violence as outlined above. Out of fear for the voters’ safety, the CEP postponed the elections. Now, with the resignation of the opposition members of the CEP it is unlikely that the Presidential elections will be completed by February 7 at this point. The best guess is that elections may be completed by March or April.

This is exactly the same situation that was created by President Preval in 2011. In January 2011, jurisprudence was created for President Preval to remain in office for three months after his term ended. Preval was late in organizing the election for a new President to be sworn in February 7, 2011. So, parliament passed a law allowing him to remain in office until the elections were completed, despite calls for his departure. Elections were held in April, and Martelly took office on May 14, 2011.

This time around, the opposition is trying to create an environment to force the President out to prevent him from completing the elections so they can open the door to an unconstitutional provisional government. There is no constitutional provision to deal with the current political situation and only one precedent set by Preval. That unconstitutional government is expected to nullify the entire process and return Haiti to political instability once again. Failure to complete the elections opens the door to putting aside the country’s constitution. A provisional government is required to change every three months when the transfer of power it's legitimate not as a result of a violent coup. It will lack legitimacy or the political power to return the country to any stable footing or to organize fair elections.

Ignoring Preval’s precedent, each section of the opposition has their own plan to install their person as President under a transitional government. The opposition currently is comprised of several grouping known as the G-8, G-30, Espace de Resistance Democratique and Fanmi Lavalas:

·      G-8: Jude Celestin qualified for the runoff is a member of G-8. The G-8 includes Pitit Dessalines, OPL, Renmen Ayiti, MOPOD, KONVIKSYON. They all hate each other, but have banded together for the coup. But it’s unlikely they can work together to put together a coalition to defeat the ruling party candidate. Each of them has their own transitional defacto government candidate. Two members of the G-8, Moise Jean Charles Pitit Dessalines and Samuel Madistin, MOPOD, have taken Jude hostage stating publicly if he decide to run they will not support him. Moise Jean Charles declared that he won the elections and should be the new President on February 7.
·      The G-30 a group of 30 candidates who represent a mere 8% of the vote wants the annulment of the elections and a defacto provisional government
·        Fanmi Lavalas, Aristide would like to put Jocelerme Privert, the Lavalas president of the senate in as the provisional president of the country and his current lawyer Gervais Charles as the provisional Prime Minister. The first step for Privert is to use negotiations to block the National Assembly until February 7 and nullify the mandate of the 14 new senators and 97 deputies that emerged from the elections. Privet falsified the amendment of Haiti's constitution in 2011.
·        Mirlande Manigat (RNDP) who did not participate in the 2014-16 electoral process published a letter basically asking to be the next provisional president. Her Prime Minister would be Michele Pierre Louis. Manigat is part of Espace de Resistance a group of political parties that did not participate at all in the elections. This faction includes FUSION, RNDP and some lesser parties that cannot compete electorally.
·        Andre Michel, an anarchist lawyer, wants to be President on February 7 as well.
·      There are several other proposals including from the economic cartel Groupe de Bourdon and civil society that want a Supreme Court judge close to them to take over. Religious sectors are also trying to influence the process. The eight presidential candidates of the protestant and the catholic churches got less than 2%. Another proposal is for a Prime Minister of consensus to serve as the head of the Executive without the President.

So what’s a viable, inclusive path forward?
Most of the recommendations of the Independent Electoral Commission and Jude Celestin’s recommendations have been implemented. What’s missing is the revamping of the CEP and more external technical assistance and muscle against the violent actors that are burning schools, voting centers, businesses and citizens private properties to impose their coup.

The Port-au-Prince coup makers were caught by surprise by the reaction of the people from nine out of the ten geographic departments who have peacefully taken the streets of the countryside waving their voting cards asking for a date to vote-- bravery in the face of violence. They are also calling “Elections Yes, Defacto government without the consent of the people No!”

The next 15 days are crucial. Various actors of the international community, such as CELAC, OAS, the US and the UN, are visiting Haiti. Aristide is lobbying in Washington, trying to blackmail Hillary Clinton, and leverage two members of the Congressional Black Caucus, a former key OAS figure and two foreign ideologues to get support for the violent coup.

But the consensus among reasonable democrats seems to be the naming of a new Prime Minister, a reshuffling of the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), and as in 2011, allowing the President, despite his desire to leave office on schedule, to remain in office until the completion of the elections between the two-runoff candidates by May 14. Even with this group sitting down to negotiate a democratic settlement, Lavalas representatives are floating unworkable solutions as a means to slow down discussions and run out the clock for the February 7 end date of Martelly’s Administration. This is widely viewed as a tactic to ensure an unconstitutional transitional government.

During the current talks, Prime Minister Evans Paul’s resignation was raised by the opposition, several names for a replacement Prime Minister have been discussed. Among then were former Prime Minister Jean Max Bellerive who was rejected because of his abysmal record as Prime Minister; and, Eriq Pierre, who has been rejected twice previously by parliament for the same office. Jonas Gue, a former Minister of Agriculture under Preval was also rejected. Three names remain on the list, Evans Paul, Senator Andris Riche and Reynold Deeb.  Additional power sharing scenarios for the cabinet are also on the table.

What is clear is that for stability in Haiti to ensure, the idea of an unconstitutional transitional government should be decisively rejected. Instead, the following recommendations should be considered:

1.     Learn from the 2010 electoral experience in which irregularities prompted a runoff between Martelly and Manigat. The process could be replicated to resolve these elections.
2.     Organize the National Assembly by February 3. If it is not organized by that date, anyone can dissolve it creating further instability.
3.     Revamp the CEP by February 5 through consultations and agreement among the Executive and Legislative branches and the two-runoff candidates. (February 10)
4.      Parliament should ratify a new Prime Minister and Cabinet by February 20 or a political agreement could reshuffle the current cabinet with Prime Minister Evans Paul that the opposition is trying to remove. If the President decides to leave the Prime Minister and the Cabinet will act as the Executive Branch. It happened twice before with Marc Bazin and Robert Malval. (February 6)
5.     Reinforce the international technical assistance to the CEP and electoral observation to ensure more transparency (February 10)
6.     Launch an international investigation to identify the undemocratic perpetrators, financier and organizers of the January 21-22 electoral violence, electoral intimidations and sanction them using the Democratic Charter. OAS has done that when political violence emerged in December 17, 2001 in Haiti. (February 6)
7.     USAID should use long term the funds given for democracy assistance to create a at INAGHEI the National Institute for Political Party Building, Governance and Electoral Worker training (June 2016)
8.     Increase media training assistance and journalists and radios accountability, fairness to avoid violence and support the creation of a national civil society press watchdog. (June 2016)
9.     OAS should train the national human rights community and ensure that some of the national human rights organizations do not replace political parties or act as such. (June 2016)
10.  Facilitate one or two Presidential Debates using the model of the Haitian Chamber of Commerce during the first round to avoid press partisanships and engage the public directly. (March 6 and 15)
11. According to the UN Security Council Resolution, review and strengthen MINUSTAH electoral security strategy that failed to stem the violence during the lead up to the scheduled January 24 elections. (February 4)




[1] On November 29, 1987, paramilitaries burned voting centers and massacred dozens of voters to prevent the vote that would sanction them to occur.
[2] Necklacing refers to a method of murder in which the victim is doused with gasoline with tires around his/her neck and set on fire.
[3] Five Lavalas senators refused to sit for quorum for 215 days preventing the vote on the electoral law – a necessary step for the organization of the elections.
[4] According to Haiti’s electoral law, after counting the ballot in each precinct, the officials prepare an original tally sheet and four copies. The original tally sheet and the counting sheets go straight to the tabulation center; one copy goes to the nine members of the CEP; one is immediately put in the front wall of the precinct for public viewing; and, the remaining two go to the poll watchers of the two candidates who received the most votes. So by midnight on Election Day, if you didn’t get a copy of the tally sheet, you knew you didn’t make it.