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Posted on Thu, Oct. 06, 2005
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The proposed Haitian election is a sham, and the Bush administration knows it. During her visit to
To begin with, most Haitians voters are disfranchised, and the period to register has ended.
The current registration was largely designed to exclude the vast majority of the poor who are supporters of Aristide's party Fanmi Lavalas. It had the predictable result. There was no registration site, for example, in Cité Soleil, a poor area of
The Peace and Justice Commission in Haiti has noted that only 10 percent of rural voters, traditionally supportive of Fanmi Lavalas, have been registered to vote in a country where 70 percent of the population lives in rural areas. Less than 60 percent of the voting population has been registered, if you believe the CEP. In the 2000 Haitian elections almost 94 percent of eligible voters were registered.
In order to vote, a Haitian must have a voter-identification card. Unfortunately, the CEP has distributed only 20,000 voter-identification cards.
In addition, the two potential candidates for president from Fanmi Lavalas, both of whom would easily win a fair election, sit as political prisoners in Haitian jails.
Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste, a hero to the Haitian community in the
The CEP, controlled by the Group 184 that led the overthrow of the democratically elected government of Haiti, has barred Jean-Juste from running for president on the grounds that he must ''personally appear'' to register as a candidate.
The interim Haitian government also has done its part in this farce by keeping both Jean-Juste and
And this is where the Bush administration's incompetence is evident. The current government was put into office by the
Interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue assumed his position after spending 15 years as a radio commentator in
Ira Kurzban was the general counsel for
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