Haiti’s Senate President,
Sen. Simon Dieuseul Desras, has clearly rejected
the so-called “Inter-Haitian Agreement of El
Rancho,” which was brokered earlier this year by
the Catholic Church’s new Haitian Cardinal
Chibly Langlois.
Named after the iconic
Pétionville hotel where it was negotiated
starting in late January and signed on Mar. 19,
the “El Rancho Accord” supposedly struck a deal
between President Michel Martelly and Haiti’s
political parties and civil society for a
political framework to hold parliamentary and
municipal elections in October.
But critics say the
negotiations only included Martelly’s political
allies. All the opposition parties and citizen
action groups, including the former president
Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s Lavalas Family party
(which briefly took part in the talks as an
“observer”), shunned the “dialogue” and have
rejected the El Rancho agreement as a sham.
Desras told Martelly that
the Parliament never agreed to the document and
therefore "the El Rancho Accord has no binding
force and cannot override either the
Constitution or the Electoral Law."
The battle is really over
who will umpire the upcoming elections. The “El
Rancho Accord” recognizes and enshrines the
Transitional College of the Permanent Electoral
Council (CTCEP), a mostly Martelly-appointed
body formed last year, as the Electoral Council
that would oversee elections.
But Sen. Desras, after
two meetings with a majority of senators, was
mandated to call on Martelly to establish a new
Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) under the
guidelines established by Article 289 of the
Haitian Constitution. This clause calls for nine
representatives from diverse sectors of Haitian
society including churches, the university,
journalists, and human rights groups.
If he fails to hold
elections this year under these conditions,
Desras said, the Senate “will have no
alternative but to demand Mr. Martelly’s
resignation.”
Already, thousands
marched in Haiti again this past week on Apr. 26
in Cap Haïtien and on Apr. 28 in Port-au-Prince
to call for President Martelly to immediately
step down and for the 10-year-long 9,000-soldier
U.N. Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH) to
leave the country.
Apr. 26 marked the
51st anniversary of a massacre carried out by
dictator Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier in 1963 and
another carried out 23 years later by Haitian
soldiers under the neo-Duvalierist regime of Gens. Henry Namphy and Williams Regala in 1986
against demonstrators commemorating the former
massacre.
“Martelly and his
cronies are too corrupt to hold free and fair
elections, and the MINUSTAH rigged the last ones
to have Martelly elected,” said Oxygène David of
the new party Dessalines Coordination (KOD),
which took part in the protests. “We need to
start with a clean slate, as a sovereign
country, without a mafia in power and without
neo-colonists meddling in our internal affairs.”
But, on Apr. 23,
Haitian-born Joël Danies, the U.S. State
Department’s lead agent on Haiti, visited the
country to pressure six influential senators who
form the core of the parliamentary resistance
against the U.S./Martelly agenda of rushing
through unconstitutional elections before the
end of this year.
Two senators refused
to meet with Danies – Sens. Moïse Jean-Charles
(North) and Francky Exius (South). No agreement
came out of Danies’ meeting with the other four:
Jean-Baptiste Bien-Aimé (North East), Westner
Polycarpe (North), John Joël Joseph (West) and
Jean William Jeanty (Nippes).
On Mar. 28-29, a U.S.
Congressional delegation including Florida
congresspeople Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Mario
Diaz-Balart (R-FL), and Frederica Wilson (D-FL)
also had visited Haiti. In an apparent response
to the six senators’ snubbing of Danies,
Ros-Lehtinen wrote an Apr. 24 letter that said:
“I’m deeply concerned that already long overdue
elections in Haiti continue to be delayed....
Congress is watching closely this process in
Haiti as we examine our foreign aid package. The
consensus El Rancho Agreement signed on Mar. 19
committed all parties to a clear path forward
for holding elections this year for the Chamber
of Deputies, two-thirds of the Senate, and local
and regional offices. The Executive Branch and
Chamber of Deputies have so far adhered to their
commitment and advanced the necessary elections
legislation. Now it is time for the Haitian
Senate to act and pass the electoral law in the
spirit of the El Rancho Agreement so that an
election date can be set.”
In contrast to
Ros-Lehtinen’s stick, MINUSTAH’s chief, Sandra
Honoré, held out a carrot in the form of a
pool-side dinner at her residence to honor Sen.
Desras on Apr. 21. "This dialogue should
continue to engage all actors,” she said,
referring to the discredited El Rancho
negotiations. “It is one of the first important
steps towards a national consensus on the
holding of elections in 2014 before arriving at
a durable solution for the future of the
country."
Sen. Desras rejected
the charges that the Senate was responsible for
holding up elections and said that a “trusted
electoral council of consensus would not take
one week to set up.”
Also attending the dinner
were Martelly allies, Sens. Jocelerme Privert
and Maxime Roumer; former Sen. Youri Latortue,
an advisor to President Martelly; Carl
Jean-Louis, an aide to Prime Minister Laurent
Lamothe,; Mirlande Hyppolite Manigat, a
representative of the opposition alliance MOPOD;
Dimitri Vorbe, a representative of the private
business sector; Mary Gilles Yolène, a
representative of the National Human Rights
Defense Network (RNDDH); journalists Daly Valet
of Radio Trans-air/Vision 2000 and Robenson
Alphonse of the daily newspaper Le
Nouvelliste, and a representative of the
Catholic Church.
In the growing war of
words, Sen. Desras, declared last week that “the
National Palace has turned into a den of
thieves.” He pointed in particular to the
appointment of Dorzena Wilma, alias Wisky Wisky,
to the city government of the town of Saut d’Eau,
although the man is an alleged member of the
recently busted kidnapping ring known as the
“Galil Gang” headed by the fugitive Woodley
“Sonson La Familia” Ethéard (see Haïti
Liberté,
4/23/2014.)
On Radio Kiskeya’s
show Public Interest, hosted by
journalist Lilliane Pierre-Paul, on Apr. 27,
Sen. Desras seemed unfazed by Washington’s
pressure on him and claimed that he too had some
"powerful international allies."
Desras concluded that
Martelly had become “completely arrogant” in
demanding that the Haitian Senate and people
swallow the El Rancho accord.
Taking
a half-step towards the demand of Haiti’s
streets for Martelly’s immediate departure,
Desras concluded:"I will call for the
resignation of President Martelly if he cannot
hold elections by the end of this year." |