OAS experts challenge Haiti election result-report

PORT-AU-PRINCE,  (Reuters) – A leaked report on  Haiti’s disputed Nov. 28 elections by Organization of American  States experts recommends that a government-backed presidential  candidate be eliminated from a second-round run-off, a U.S.  media report said yesterday.
The Associated Press, which said it had obtained a copy of  the OAS team’s draft report, cited the document as challenging  the preliminary election results released on Dec. 7 by Haiti’s  Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), which had put government  technocrat Jude Celestin in the second round.

Jude Celestin
Jude Celestin

The Provisional Electoral Council said it had not yet  received the final report by the OAS experts who have worked  since late last month to verify the contested results from the  chaotic presidential and legislative polls.
At a news conference with Haitian journalists late yesterday, outgoing President Rene Preval also indicated that he  had not seen the report.
“I have nothing to say about the (OAS) recommendations  because I have not read them,” Preval said. “I don’t have them  in my hands.”
The leaked report’s recommendation seemed likely to roil  the edgy political climate in Haiti just days before the  country and the international community commemorate the first  anniversary of the Jan. 12 quake.
The preliminary Dec. 7 results triggered several days of  street riots and protests, mostly by supporters of third-place  candidate and popular musician Michel Martelly who was edged  out of the second round by Celestin. Both finished behind  opposition matriarch Mirlande Manigat, who received the most  votes in the first round, but not enough for an outright win.
“The Provisional Electoral Council does not have the OAS  report,” CEP Director-General Pierre-Louis Opont told Reuters.
OAS officials in Haiti said they were still working on the  final version of the report on the election results to be  delivered to the CEP and Preval.
“We don’t have a final report as yet, we’re working on it  … We hope to have it finished by the end of the day,” said  Ambassador Colin Granderson, who heads a joint OAS-Caribbean  Community mission that observed the Nov. 28 elections.
OAS and CEP officials said they could not comment on the  contents of the leaked OAS report as cited by the Associated  Press. One official called the leak “disappointing.”
“DANGEROUS CROSSROADS”
Preval, under fire from critics over his  government’s response to the earthquake and to a subsequent  deadly cholera epidemic, is understood to be anxious to avoid  mixing the electoral dispute with the Jan. 12 earthquake  memorial events, foreign diplomats said.
Preval, whose mandate ends on Feb. 7 but has a  parliament-approved authorization to stay in office until May  14 if this is made necessary by handover delays, has described  the election results impasse as “a dangerous crossroads.”
The protests and violence which followed the Dec. 7  preliminary results have stoked fears that instability could  delay the handover of billions of dollars of urgently needed  reconstruction funds after the earthquake from foreign donors.
The leaked report cited by the Associated Press said the  OAS experts found correct election procedures had not been  followed and that there were signs that vote tally sheets had  been altered.
According to the review quoted by the Associated Press,  Martelly, a star of Haiti’s Kompa music, would end up in second  place in the first round with 22.2 percent, while Preval  protege Celestin would drop to third place, and out of the  second round, with 21.9 percent.
Manigat would remain in first place and in the second round  with 31.6 percent of the vote.
This compared with the preliminary results announced on  Dec. 7 by the CEP which gave Manigat 31.37 percent, Celestin  22.48 percent, and Martelly 21.84 percent.
Election observers say that even if the CEP heeds the OAS  experts’ findings, it still has to complete a disputes  procedure before it can formally announce final revised results  from the Nov. 28 first round vote.
This means Haiti will not be able to hold a presidential  election second round run-off before February.