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27873: Craig (news) NYT Opinion: Stumbling forward in Haiti (fwd)
From: Dan Craig
Stumbling forward in Haiti
The New York Times
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2006
The internationally brokered deal that declared René Préval the official winner
of last week's Haitian election provided the best available exit from a bad and
worsening situation. It required reinterpreting the election rules after the
votes had been counted, which tarnishes the democratic legitimacy this election
was supposed to provide.
But the prospects for a democratically acceptable outcome faced a more imminent
threat from escalating violence by the frustrated Préval supporters who
believed, perhaps accurately, that they had been defrauded of a first-round
victory. By any count, Préval won at least 48.7 percent of the votes and led
his nearest rival by a margin of 4-1. Dispensing with a runoff creates a narrow
path forward, if Préval is wise enough to take it.
That will require reaching out to his opponents, as well as reining in his
violence-prone supporters, many of them inherited from his mentor, the
twice-elected, twice-deposed former president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Aristide
and Préval, who won an election in 1995, are the only two democratically
elected leaders in Haiti's long history. Only Préval peacefully served a full
five-year term.
Beyond this feat of survival, Préval did not have a successful first term. The
police remained brutal and corrupt. No progress was made toward creating a
competent judiciary. Legislative elections were badly flawed. Drug trafficking
flourished. Pro-government gangs ruled the slums. Little economic growth
trickled down to the impoverished majority.
At least some of the responsibility for that lies with Aristide, the real
political power during the first Préval presidency. If Préval again lets
Aristide run things, those problems could recur. If he tries to keep Aristide
at a distance, popular support for him could shrink fast. Under any
circumstances, Haiti will need international support for a long time.
Copyright © 2006 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com