Saturday, August 21, 2010

Haiti Calm After Jean Is Rejected

The streets of Haiti remained calm on Saturday, a day after the country’s election officials ended the singer Wyclef Jean’s brief, electrifying run for president, suggesting that the distraction of politics had once again given way to the country’s struggle for survival.

A decision announced late on Friday prevented Mr. Jean from being among the approved candidates. And though tensions had been building throughout the day, with hundreds of Mr. Jean’s supporters rallying on his behalf and a large contingent of police officers on the streets, night fell and morning came on Saturday without protest or violence.

Gracia Thevenin, a businessman in a suburb of Port-au-Prince, the capital, and a Jean supporter, said because the news of Mr. Jean’s denial had started leaking out early in the week, people were able to digest it.

“Everyone expected it,” Mr. Thevenin said, noting that it had been widely known that Mr. Jean had not met the requirement of having lived in Haiti for five consecutive years before the Nov. 28 elections. He left Haiti as a boy for the United States, where he was raised in Brooklyn. “Wherever you went, people said, ‘It looks like Wyclef isn’t going to be able to run.’ ”

Mr. Jean, the hip-hop artist and former frontman for the Fugees, had held out hope, sending out messages Thursday on Twitter that said he was still waiting for a formal decision. But when it came late Friday, he seemed prepared and accepted the ruling calmly.

In a statement on Friday night, he acknowledged that he had been rejected because he did not meet the residency requirement, which he had argued should be waived. He said that he was disappointed, but that he hoped his supporters would continue to work hard to help Haiti.

“We must all honor the memories of those we’ve lost — whether in the earthquake or at any time — by responding peacefully and responsibly,” he said.

It remained unclear what role, if any, he would play as the campaign moves forward. He pledged in his statement to “continue to work for Haiti’s renewal,” but he has given no hint whom of the 19 approved candidates he might support.

On Saturday, he attended a church service in his mother’s hometown outside the capital, according to The Associated Press, and prepared to fly back to the United States, where his wife and daughter live. He did not speak to the news media.

Some of Mr. Jean’s friends, including the novelist Edwidge Danticat, said that while his effort had been an inspiration, it was time to get back to work on improving the country.

“Now that the decision has been made, we must return to the less exciting and more somber business at hand, she wrote in The Miami Herald. “Nine million people, many of whom live in deplorable conditions in makeshift shelters, deserve no less.”

Vladimir LaGuerre contributed reporting from Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Haitians rally for Wyclef Jean's presidential candidacy








CEP announcement- List of candidates accepted:

1- Axan Abellard Delson (Konbit Nasyonal pou developman Ayiti)

2- Bijou Anne Marie Josette (IND)

3- Charles Henri Baker (Respè)

4- Erick Smarcki Charles (PENH)

5- Garaudy Laguerre (Wozo)

6- Génard Joseph (Groupement Solidarité)

7- Gérard Blot (Plateforme 16 décembre)

8- Jacques-Edouard Alexis (Ambake)

9- Jean Henry Céant (Renmen Ayiti)

10- Jean-Chavannes Jeunes (Alliance Chrétienne pour reconstruire Haïti)

11- Jean-Hector Anancacis (MODEJHA)

12- Jude Celestin (INITE)

13- Léon J. Jeune (Konbit Liberasyon Ekonomik)

14- Leslie Voltaire (Plateforme Ansanm nou fò)

15- Michel Martelly Joseph (Repons peyizan)

16- Mirlande Manigat (RDNP)

17- Wilson Jeudy (Force 2010)

18- Yves Cristalin (LAVNI)

19- Yvon Neptune (Ayisyen pou Ayiti)



CEP announcement- List of candidates rejected:


1- Kesnel Dalmacy (Indépendant)

2- Armand Pierre Canon (PPL)

3- Eugène Jacques Philippe (PSR)

4- Fleurival Paul Arthur (Vwazinaj)

5- Charles Henri Voight (MRDH)

6- Claire-Lydie Parent (konbit pour refè Ayiti)

7- Duroseau Vilaire Cluny (IND)

8- Jean Bertin (Parti Socialiste Haïtien)

9- Lavarice Gaudin (Veye Yo)

10- Menela Vilsaint (Le National)

11- Wyclef Jeannel Jean (Viv ansanm)

12- Olicier Piériche (Parti reconstruire Haïti)

13- Raymond Joseph Alcide (PDI)

14- René Saint-Fort (Parti réformiste national)

15- Rodriguez Mario Eddy Gabriel (IND)

Haiti's MIA president surfaces


PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- Haitian President Rene Preval peers off and rubs his beard when he thinks about those 35 seconds when the earth convulsed.

Preval was feeding his eight-month-old granddaughter dinner in the courtyard of the presidential mansion. They were thrown to the ground as the house collapsed. Unable to reach anyone on the phone, Preval jumped on the back of a motorcycle taxi and directed the driver toward downtown. Wending through the rubble in the dark, he couldn't comprehend the scope of death and ruin.

"Pain made me speechless," he says, in a two-hour interview in an office behind the half-collapsed National Palace. "As a person I was paralyzed."

In the days and weeks following the Jan. 12 earthquake, Haitians desperately wanted to hear from their leader. Soon they were furious at his silence.

"I was much criticized for not having spoken... To say what? To the thousands of parents whose children were dead. To the hundreds of schoolchildren I was hearing scream, 'Come help me!' " He pauses and sighs. "I couldn't find the words to say to those people."

Preval, 67, a quiet former agronomist with a gap-toothed smile and silver beard that some Haitians suspect has magical powers, has always been an enigmatic figure. He concluded his first term as president, in 2001, with a prophetic warning of the chaos to come -- "Swim to get out" -- and retreated to a tiny home in the northern mountains to help peasants grow bamboo.

When he ran again in 2006, he barely campaigned and said almost nothing. Political observers were perplexed by his candidacy, because he never seemed to really like being president. He certainly never showed the thirst for power of any of his rivals or predecessors, and his return to the National Palace felt so casual as if to be almost accidental.

So did his success. Preval's government quietly settled a gang war that had paralyzed the capital, stopped a horrific spate of kidnappings, restored regular electricity, reformed a corrupt police force, and secured trade preferences from Washington. And despite being hit by two destructive hurricanes, Haiti experienced a semblance of political stability for the first time in decades.

The world didn't notice because, for once, Haiti was not in the news.

"He came in when the country was at war," says Michele Montas, a longtime journalist and now a special adviser to the head of the United Nations mission in Haiti. "He brought the opposition into the government. He tried to reassure the private sector. As a journalist in this country for 30 years, I've never seen a political figure as shrewd as Rene Preval... Can you imagine a politician who gets to power and he didn't even campaign?

"I really think he's misunderstood. But to some extent it's his own fault."

Haitians have long grumbled about Preval's inability or unwillingness to speak to the masses and pitch a vision of the future. But when the earthquake killed an estimated 230,000 people, displaced more than a million more and levelled whole swaths of the capital, what was once seen as a tolerable quirk in a humble man became a focal point of the nation's outrage.

Asked what Preval has done for the country, people in many parts of the capital grimace or swipe their hands in disgust, as if the answer is so obvious that the question itself is an outrage.

"Preval didn't do a damn thing," says Kerby Badio, 28, living in the sprawling tent camp outside the palace that Haitians call the White House. "He can't even get the palace fixed. If a country doesn't have a White House, it's not a nation."

Badio voted for Preval in 2006 because he thought he would make life better for the poor. But the president's seeming absence after the earthquake crystallized a feeling that he didn't empathize with their suffering.

"When a country goes through something like that, everyone looks for a president to say something. He didn't say anything for weeks. He was just riding around on his motorcycle."

Foreign aid groups and diplomats have complained that Preval has been indecisive and has failed to settle key issues of where to settle the displaced.

"We know that it is not an easy task," says Julie Schindall, a spokesman for the relief group Oxfam, which supplies clean water to the camps. But the people in the camps "are living on the edge. And they need to know what the future holds."

Preval rode to power on the wings of his political mentor, the fiery slum priest-turned-president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

The two had become friends when Preval owned a bakery that supplied free bread to Aristide's church. When he succeeded Aristide as president in 1995, they had grown estranged, and Aristide was unwilling to give up his power, having his own loyalists embedded in the police and government and terrorizing opponents with street gangs.

The message of who really ruled was made clear when Preval and his then-wife found their dog dying of a machete blow -- inside the National Palace.

His weak position hit its nadir in 2000 when his best friend, the crusading radio broadcaster Jean Dominique, was assassinated after criticizing various Aristide acolytes of corruption and thuggery. Preval was devastated. He appointed a judge to investigate, but when Aristide succeeded him in 2001, the judge found his budget and security suddenly withdrawn, and fled to Miami.

Still, Preval's first term was noted for many improvements -- new roads, schools, hospitals. He cleaned out many of the "zombie" employees on the government payrolls and investigated human rights abuses.

He has always said he prefers practical steps to sweeping ideology or rhetoric.

Preval details a range of plans to build temporary shelters, followed by tall apartment buildings, to bring order to the teeming neighborhoods where houses were literally built on top one another. He appointed a civil engineer to work with UN officials and relief organizations to settle land disputes and find suitable places for the people in the tent camps.

"If the people know that within five years there will be apartment buildings, they will go," he said.

But he knows he is in no position to promise them this. The election to replace him is scheduled for Nov. 28. The UN advisers working on the issue hadn't even heard of this apartment idea, and appeared to be waiting for his successor to grapple with long-term issues.

He hopes he can make some headway before his legacy is sealed by catastrophe.

"There was so much death, so much suffering, one has to find a person responsible for that. Since they can't accuse the one up there," he says, pointing up, "they are accusing the one in the palace. Sometimes you have the impression people are accusing you of actually causing the earthquake."

-- Los Angeles Times

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/fyi/haitis-mia-president-surfaces-101215114.html

Sarodj Bertin, notre unique candidate

Haïti: Sarodj Bertin, 24 ans, fille de Jean Bertin (candidat évincé de la course électorale ce vendredi) et de Mireille Durocher (avocate assassinée en 1995) portera les couleurs d'Haïti et tâchera de décrocher la couronne ce lundi 22 août, lors de la finale du concours Miss Univers.

A trois jours de la finale, Sarodj est classée parmi les 15 finalistes et de nombreux sites spécialisés la classe parmi les 5 prétendantes les mieux placées pour remporter le titre du prestigieux concours organisé par le milliardaire Donald Trump.

La cérémonie, qui sera retransmise à partir de 11 heures du soir (heure d'Haïti) par toutes les télévisions du monde, se déroulera à Las Vegas. Sarodj aura à faire face à 82 autres concurrentes. Haïti n'a pas participé à cette compétition mondiale depuis 1989, soit depuis 21 ans.



Placée parmi les favorites par les organisateurs qui la suivent depuis des semaines - le concours est un long processus - Sarodj a de fortes chances de remporter la couronne.

Belle à damner tous les saints de la terre, cette avocate en devenir qui vit en République Dominicaine est une habituée des podiums et concours depuis des années et a remporté diverses compétitions depuis son plus jeune âge.

Belle tête et beau corps, la fille de Mireille Durocher s'illustre aussi par son caractère. Elle a refusé, par exemple, de poser torse nu pour un artiste de renom dans le cadre du concours. L'artiste allait se servir de son corps pour en faire un tableau.

En fait, Sarodj est une oeuvre d'art vivante, disent ceux qui l'ont approchée.

Au fur et à mesure que les médias internationaux ont donné écho de sa présence et de son éclat parmi les autres postulantes du concours Miss Univers 2010, ses cotes d'amour et de popularité ont augmenté dans le public haïtien, particulièrement sur les réseaux sociaux Facebook et Twitter où ses fans s'affichent et lui prêtent un destin assuré : la couronne de Miss Univers.



Ce serait une revanche pour Haïti en cette année 2010 et surtout une occasion d'effacer avec grâce les accrocs enregistrés lors de sa désignation comme Miss Haïti Univers.
En effet, sa sélection s'était déroulée dans des conditions assez particulières.

Sarodj, rentrée en Haïti avec les organisateurs, et accompagné de son père qui servait aussi de traducteur aux 18 autres postulantes haïtiennes, avait facilement accompli les épreuves d'un concours organisé en quelques heures sur deux jours

Dans une interview accordée à un journaliste à l'issue de ce premier sacre sur la route du titre de Miss Univers, Sarodj avait affirmé vouloir profiter de son futur titre pour aider son pays Haïti.

"C'est le meilleur moment pour montrer au monde que derrière la souffrance et la pauvreté, nous pouvons aussi avoir de jolies choses comme la beauté", avait-t-elle déclaré.

En ces temps de campagne électorale, Sarodj Bertin est une candidate pleine de charme. Bonne chance pour lundi, Miss Haïti!

http://lenouvelliste.com/article.php?PubID=1&ArticleID=82741&PubDate=2010-08-20

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