Violence ebbing ahead of Haiti elections (AP) Updated: 2005-11-25 09:17
The United Nations on Thursday said it was prepared to provide security for
voters in presidential elections scheduled for next month, noting that violence
has ebbed across much of Haiti.
The U.N.'s 7,600-strong peacekeeping force has identified the risk level for
each of the more than 800 voting centers so they can provide appropriate
staffing for the Dec. 27 elections, said U.N. spokesman Damian Onses-Cardona.
The U.N. has also trained 3,600 civilians to act as security personnel at the
polls, he said.
Haiti has struggled to organize the election because of a lack of equipment
and trained poll workers, crumbling infrastructure, and violence that has made
it difficult to register voters. The elections were postponed twice before the
latest date was set.
Voters will choose from about 35 candidates for president and hundreds of
candidates for 129 legislative seats.
The U.N. and other international donors are financing more than 95 percent of
the $60 million electoral budget. The U.N. troops came to Haiti in June 2004,
four months after a violent rebellion led to the ouster of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Human rights groups say at least 1,500 people have died in violence in the
capital in the past year, much of it blamed on street gangs that allegedly
support Aristide, now in exile in South Africa. Though security has improved
throughout much of Haiti recently, violence persists in the slums of the
capital.
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