On
Jan. 3, Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council (CEP)
published the final results of the Nov. 20, 2016
presidential election, and there was no surprise. As
contested preliminary results had suggested, Jovenel
Moïse, the candidate of former president Michel
Martelly’s Haitian Bald-Headed Party (PHTK), won a
first-round victory with 55.6% of the 1,062,839 valid
votes cast.
Shockingly, the
former banana exporter, 48, known as “Nèg Banann” or
Banana Man, won power with only 9.55% of Haiti’s 6.2
million electorate, a total of 590,927 votes. (In
contrast, former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide won
with 1.6 million votes in 1990 and 2.2 million in 2000.)
In fact, if one
adds the 57,824 voided ballots to the valid ones, only
1,120,663 people had their votes counted, 18.11% of the
electorate. This sets a new record low presidential
election turn-out for Haiti and the Western Hemisphere.
Therefore, a
stunning 81.89% of Haitian voters were either not
counted, prevented from voting, discouraged about
voting, uninterested in voting, or refused to vote in
protest against the continuing presence of the 3,000
troops and policemen of the United Nations Mission to
Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH). This latter category of
non-voters believe that no truly free, fair, and
sovereign election can take place under a foreign
military occupation, especially one that is acting on
behalf of the U.S., France, and Canada, the three
imperial powers most politically and economically
invested in Haiti.
The CEP’s
announcement of final results came immediately following
the ruling of a five-judge National Electoral Challenges
Court (BCEN), which found that “there was no massive
fraud, but the analysis of 12% of the voter tallies [procès
verbaux or PV]
revealed irregularities which could not affect the
outcome.”
The random tally
sheet review came in response to legal challenges by the
three runners-up: Jude Célestin of the Alternative
League for Progress and Haitian Emancipation (LAPEH), an
affiliate of former president René Préval, who received
19.57% of the vote; Moïse Jean-Charles of the Dessalines
Children (Pitit Desalin) party, a Lavalas break-away,
who got 11.04%; and Dr. Maryse Narcisse of Aristide’s Lavalas Family
Political Organization (FL), who garnered 9.01%.
After reviewing
close to 1,300 PVs, the BCEN flagged only 78 of them as
having “irregularities,” mostly poorly written or
calculated totals for the candidates. Of those, they
disqualified 70. Therefore, there was a difference of
7,103 votes (valid plus voided) between the final
results and the preliminary ones, which had been
announced on Nov. 28, 2016, auguring Mr. Moïse’s win.
In the end, 1,305
tally sheets were disqualified, 118 were never received
at the Vote Tabulation Center (CTV), and 10,565 were
counted. Out of the 27 presidential candidates who ran,
the bottom 23 combined only amassed 4.78% of the vote.
Three of the nine
CEP members had abstained from signing off on the
preliminary results, but all nine signed the final
tally.
Pitit Desalin and
LAPEH questioned the partiality of the BCEN judges and
refused to recognize the CEP’s final results. The FL
announced that it was suspending its legal challenges.
The PHTK and other
right-wing parties allied with it also dominated the
parliamentary elections. Of 24 House of Deputies races,
the PHTK won five seats, while its allies in KID, KONA,
and Bouclier won five. In contrast, the FL won two
seats, and Pitit Desalin one.
Meanwhile, in three
Senate run-offs where the top two finishers win seats,
the PHTK took two seats, in the North and Center
departments, while the infamous paramilitary DEA
fugitive and PHTK ally Guy Philippe of Consortium was
elected for the Grand’Anse department. Bouclier’s Nawoon
Marcellus, a former Lavalas deputy, also won a Senate
seat for the North department.
In ten other Senate first round races, the PHTK was
leading in six, while its confederates in AAA, KONA, and
Bouclier were leading in three. The final legislative
run-offs are scheduled for Jan. 29. |