Irregularities don’t invalidate Haiti poll-observers

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – International observers  yesterday cautiously endorsed Haiti’s troubled elections,  saying they could be considered valid despite “irregularities”  that generated popular protests and charges of fraud.

The problems detected included some voter manipulation,  acts of violence and intimidation, a “toxic atmosphere” created  by fraud allegations and cases of voters not being able to find  where to cast their ballots, the joint observer mission from  the Organization of American States/Caribbean Community said.

“The joint mission does not believe that these  irregularities, serious as some were, necessarily invalidated  the process,” Ambassador Colin Granderson, head of the  OAS/Caricom mission, told a news conference in Port-au-Prince.

The assessment of his 118-member team, which observed  Sunday’s elections across Haiti, gave some relief to an  international community anxious to see the polls produce a  stable, legitimate government for the earthquake-ravaged  Caribbean nation.     Foreign donors see this as crucial for administering  billions of dollars of funds pledged to help the Western  Hemisphere’s poorest state recover from a devastating Jan. 12  earthquake that killed more than 250,000 people. An earlier declaration by Haiti’s electoral authorities  that the polls were largely a success flew in the face of  widespread popular anger over voting problems and denunciation  of “massive fraud” by 12 of the 18 presidential contenders.

But musician Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly, one of the  election frontrunners who had called with the others on Sunday  for the polls to be annulled, backed away from this position on  Monday, saying he believed the votes should be counted.

Another frontrunner, opposition matriarch Mirlande Manigat,  also softened her call for annulment, saying she would  participate in a run-off if the vote count showed her among the  two candidates with the most votes.

The varied field of presidential candidates raised the  likelihood of a deciding second round on Jan. 16.
Granderson of the OAS/Caricom observer mission criticized  the public fraud denunciation as “hasty and regrettable”.
Martelly, whose supporters had been among the most active  in protesting the elections on Sunday, explained his change of  position by saying his candidacy had been leading in polling  stations where there had not been fraud.

“I want the electoral council, President (Rene) Preval and  the international community to respect the voice of the  population,” he told reporters in Port-au-Prince.

Martelly, whose call for the votes to be counted was backed  by fellow musician and hip-hop star Wyclef Jean, appealed for  his supporters to remain calm.

Before Martelly and Manigat softened their positions, the  candidates’ joint fraud denunciation had left Jude Celestin,  the candidate of outgoing president Preval’s Inite (Unity)  coalition, virtually alone among the presidential contenders in  upholding the legitimacy of the polls.

Martelly, Celestin and Manigat had been leading the field  of the 18 presidential candidates, according to opinion polls.
In the heart of the sprawling capital, expectation,  uncertainly and fears of unrest were running high. The city’s  rubble-strewn streets are now also littered with electoral  posters and, in some areas, unused ballot papers.