Canada is pressuring Haiti to make a firm commitment to holding elections by the end of the year as domestic opposition grows to President René Préval’s response to the earthquake.
Haiti’s constitution stipulates presidential elections be held Nov. 28, ahead of the scheduled end to Préval’s five-year term in February 2011.
That option has not found favour among Haiti’s international backers.
“We’re looking for a commitment from the government,” Cannon said Friday after addressing a conference in Montreal on Haiti’s reconstruction.
“The international community wants to see a commitment, a solid, serious commitment to have an election by the end of this year.”
Cannon said he made Ottawa’s view known to the Haitian president during a recent trip to the country.
Préval has kept a low profile since the devastating quake rocked the country in January, killing more than 200,000 people and crippling its governing infrastructure.
In recent weeks opposition groups have held increasingly vocal demonstrations criticizing his government’s response to the crisis.
Several thousand people, many of them supporters of former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide, staged an angry protest recently outside the ruined national palace.
Witnesses said they heard several gunshots as riot police dispersed the crowd with tear gas.
Haiti politically ‘fragile’ before quake
“The state is bankrupt, the nation is divided… there is no leadership,” Charles Henri Baker, a former presidential candidate and leader of the Respect political party, told the Montreal conference.
“Institutions are practically non-existent and are the result of poor government. There is an urgent need to restore the authority of the state.”
Secret briefing documents prepared by the Foreign Affairs Department and access-to-information documents obtained by The Canadian Press indicate Ottawa considered the political environment in Haiti to be “fragile” even prior to the natural disaster.
“Before the earthquake, we considered 2010 a turning point for Haiti, with legislative elections scheduled for February and presidential elections for November,” the briefing note reads.
Concerns over Préval’s legitimacy were compounded when the legislative elections set for last February were cancelled because of the earthquake.
When the terms of the entire lower house and a third of the Senate expired in early May, it left only a rump upper house dominated by Préval’s allies.
Cannon acknowledged several challenges had to be addressed before elections could be held.
Elections feasible: UN
A UN report has reportedly found that elections are “technically, logistically and financially” feasible.
But coming up with accurate voter rolls would be nearly impossible given the hundreds of thousands who are dead or displaced.
In addition, Haiti’s electoral commission has its own credibility problems after it banned Fanmi Lavalas, Aristide’s former party as well as the country’s largest, from taking part in the cancelled February legislative elections.
It was a decision that contributed to Ottawa’s concerns about the country’s stability.
Aristide, now in exile, was ousted in a 2004 coup.
For Cannon, and Haiti’s other patrons, elections represent a way to calm investors who may be reticent about Haiti’s political situation.
“The sooner we have political stability the sooner we’re going to be able to get economic stability and growth in that country,” Cannon said.
He added that Canada is willing to provide support for the electoral process. In the past it has sent monitoring teams.