One dead in pro-Preval protests in Haiti (AP) Updated: 2006-02-14 09:04 In the middle-class Tabarre neighborhood, Associated Press journalists saw
the body of a man on a street, blood soaking Preval's image emblazoned on his
T-shirt. Dozens of witnesses said Jordanian U.N. peacekeepers in a jeep opened
fire, killing two people and wounding four. The body of the second victim was
not seen.
"We were peacefully protesting when the U.N. started shooting," said Walrick
Michel, 22.
U.N. spokesman David Wimhurst first denied that peacekeepers fired any
rounds, then later said they had fired in the air.
"We fired two warning shots into the air and we didn't injure anyone," he
said.
In the Petionville neighborhood in the hills east of Port-au-Prince,
thousands of screaming protesters poured into the Montana Hotel, where election
officials had been announcing results. U.N. peacekeepers armed with assault
rifles looked on from the grounds and the roof. No violence was reported.
Protesters waving Preval campaign posters and tree branches jumped up and
down in unison, chanting: "Now is the time! Now is the time!" Dozens
somersaulted fully clothed into the pool, turning the water into froth as they
splashed around — a rare treat in a country where most people lack running
water.
Protesters stretched out on chaise lounges and ran past rooms costing $200
and more a night.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu, who is visiting Haiti, came out of
his suite to appeal for calm. One of his security agents said the South African
had refused to be evacuated by a helicopter plucking guests from the roof.
U.N. peacekeepers controlled access to a separate part of the hotel that was
being used as an election center, and U.N. Huey helicopters clattered overhead.
After several hours, the crowd filed out of the hotel.
"We came looking for someone to give us the real results," said a 30-year-old
Preval organizer who identified himself only as "Sanpeur." "We made them leave
because we don't want disorder. We did not come here looking for violence."
The Bush administration urged Haitians to refrain from violence and to
respect the results of the election.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said that once results are
announced, all parties should "come together and work together" for the
betterment of the country.
With about 90 percent of the vote counted, Preval was leading with 48.7
percent, Haiti's electoral council said on its Web site. His nearest opponent
was Leslie Manigat, another former president, who had 11.8 percent.
But of the 2.2 million ballots cast, about 125,000 ballots have been declared
invalid because of irregularities, raising suspicion among Preval supporters
that polling officials were rigging the election.
Another 4 percent of the ballots were blank but were still added into the
total, making it harder for Preval to obtain the 50 percent plus one vote
needed.
Jacques Bernard, director-general of the nine-member electoral council,
denied accusations that the council voided many votes for Preval.
Valdes said he did not believe there was fraud, although he noted that the
voided and blank votes "pose some questions."
Council member Patrick Fequiere said Bernard was releasing results without
notifying other council members or telling them where he was obtaining his
information. And another council member, Pierre Richard Duchemin, said he was
being denied access to the tabulation process.
"According to me, there's a certain level of manipulation," Duchemin said,
adding that "there is an effort to stop people from asking questions."
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