Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Haiti stands to lose billions in aid

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WASHINGTON – A powerful United States legislator today warned that political uncertainty looming over earthquake-ravaged Haiti could cost the French-speaking Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country billions of dollars in reconstruction dollars.
Indiana Republican Senator Richard Lugar of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, blames Haitian President René Préval’s failure to enact needed reforms for what he described as the “chaos and irregularities” in Sunday’s legislative and presidential elections.
Earlier this year Lugar and some US legislators called on Préval to change the nine-member Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), but the president, noting that he had already changed the CEP before, refused to honour the call.
“I and others urged President Préval to enact much-needed reforms to ensure the credibility of these elections,” Lugar told reporters.
“He refused to do that. As a result, the elections have been fraught with numerous reports of irregularities and fraud. Political uncertainty now threatens to exacerbate the human suffering in Haiti,” he added.
Since the devastating January 12 earthquake, at least 1.5 million people remain under tents and a cholera epidemic has killed more than 1 700 people in the past month.
“The United States has an interest in helping to address the ongoing humanitarian problems in Haiti, and we will continue to do that through various means,” Lugar said.
“But our willingness to direct funds through the Haitian government depends on the fair, transparent, and legal resolution of the current political crisis,” he added.
Meanwhile, the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) is urging Haitians to be patient and wait on official election results.
“The ‘quick counts’ or opinion polls are not an exact science. Individuals and media should not be guided by the unofficial results, speculation or assumed partial accounts that are currently circulating,” said MINUSTAH in a statement. 
“The only poll that counts is the one that took place on November 28,” it added. “We call on everyone to be patient and await the announcement of official results of the December 7.
“The Provisional Electoral Council should have time and political stability to complete its work. The result will be subject to possible challenge by candidates, political parties and the Haitian people through the legal process of litigation,” it continued.
Political observers say the political tension in Haiti was especially evident on Tuesday when the UN troops and protesters clashed in a second day of demonstrations in Saint Marc, a western port city north of Port-au-Prince, the capital.
Witnesses said UN peacekeepers fired shots in the air and tear gas in the direction of opposition protesters who were supporting presidential candidate Mirlande Manigat and senatorial candidate Francois Anick Joseph. Protesters retaliated by burning tires and throwing rocks.
A UN spokesman said that about 600 protesters had assembled in front of the UN base in Saint Marc.
“They were burning tires and throwing rocks on our forces there,” said Jean-Francois Vezina, a spokesman for UN police. (CMC)

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