Haiti postpones presidential election as violence erupts

By Frank Jack Daniel PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti called off Sunday's presidential election after violent protests erupted on Friday and the opposition candidate vowed to boycott the vote over alleged fraud. Pierre Louis Opont, president of Haiti's electoral council, said the runoff vote was being pushed back for security reasons. He did not say when the election, which the U.S. government is helping to fund, would be rescheduled. The announcement first sparked jubilation among the demonstrators on the streets of the capital Port-au-Prince, but the mood quickly darkened. Gunshots were fired as protesters clashed with police. The postponement is nevertheless expected to ease unrest after days of protests in the deeply impoverished country of about 10 million people, at pains to rebuild from a devastating earthquake six years ago and to emerge from decades of political dysfunction. Opposition candidate Jude Celestin said last week he would not take part in the election, alleging a first round vote in October was rigged to favor the ruling party candidate. Hamstrung with weak institutions, Haiti has struggled to build a stable democracy since the overthrow of the 1957-1986 dictatorship of the Duvalier family and ensuing military coups and election fraud. Protesters have burnt vehicles and windows in recent days in Port-au-Prince. On Friday, police fired at a group of people who were attacking a man who appeared to have fired shots at them. The man lay on the ground bleeding profusely, but it was unclear how he was injured. Protesters set fire to at least one car. Burning tires peppered the streets with one billowing black smoke directly below a giant poster of ruling party candidate Jovenel Moise. Another group stabbed a poster of Moise with a metal pole. "The direction (outgoing President Michel) Martelly has taken the country is no good," said Rolando Joilcoeui, a community worker standing among thousands of people in the streets. "We've said 'no' to that regime. The election was a fraud." GRINDING TO A STANDSTILL Swiss-trained engineer Celestin has said the government has not done enough to remedy cheating in the first round, and called the plans for the second round vote "a farce." Celestin was second in a field of 54 candidates in the October election. He came in almost eight percentage points behind Moise, a banana-exporter and political newcomer running on a platform to modernize agriculture and better manage water in the flood and drought-prone nation. After the postponement, members of Moise's campaign team were grim-faced as they gathered at a city hotel. Asked what happens next, one said: "That's the million dollar question." Pressure for postponement had been building over the week. Haiti's newly appointed senators voted almost unanimously to postpone the vote, and the Catholic church, business groups and local election observers all warned that an election under such conditions would not lead to a credible outcome. In a statement from the United Nations, the "core group" of countries aiding Haiti that include Brazil, Canada, France, Spain and the United States among others, said they deplored the violence and reiterated their "continued support for the conclusion of an inclusive and equitable electoral process." Moise had told Reuters earlier on Friday that he expected the vote to take place as planned, and was still in campaign mode. Only about a quarter of Haiti's 5.8 million registered voters cast their ballots in the first round, organized with some $30 million of U.S. support. Local observers say a legal loophole meant thousands of booth watchers employed by parties were able to vote more than once. The Organization of American States has also signaled the poll watchers as a major source of voting irregularities. That anomaly has been largely fixed, but the observers feared turnout in the second round vote would be even lower because Haitians were fearful of being caught up in the clashes between police and protesters. Formerly a singer known as Sweet Micky famous for his performances on carnival floats, Martelly is required by the constitution to leave office by Feb. 7, when the annual celebration starts this year. However, his five-year term only ends in May, leaving some flexibility for the vote to happen later, with some proposals this week including a March election. The opposition groups want Martelly to leave on Feb. 7, and a transitional, interim government be set up to oversee a totally new electoral process. After months of political upheaval that started with violence and ballot stuffing in an August vote for lawmakers, some Haitians see the delay as a recipe for more uncertainty and prefer to push ahead. "Everything has come to a standstill because of the elections," said out-of-work construction laborer Rodrigue Pierre, holding a hammer on the edge of a hillside cinder-block slum in Port-au-Prince. "We just want a new president." (Additional reporting by Joseph Guyler Delva and Andres Martinez Casares in Haiti and Louis Charbonneau in New York; Editing by Simon Gardner, Toni Reinhold and Mary Milliken)