PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – Supporters of former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide marched through Port-au-Prince yesterday calling for his return from exile and protesting his party’s exclusion from upcoming elections.
Several thousand protesters joined in the protest march, which marked Aristide’s rise to power as Haiti’s first democratically elected president in December 1990.
The demonstrators accused the government of President Rene Preval, a one-time Aristide ally, of planning a fraudulent legislative ballot on Feb. 28 and said they would boycott the vote in the impoverished Caribbean nation.
Aristide’s populist Fanmi Lavalas political movement has been banned from participating in the election on grounds it failed to meet the legal requirements for registration.
“There will be no election in February, there will be a selection. What the authorities are planning is really a big farce,” Dr. Maryse Narcisse, a leading member of Aristide’s party, told Reuters.
“The president and election officials are the masterminds behind the plan to exclude the majority of the population from the vote,” said Narcisse, who spoke as she marched with others through the streets of Port-au-Prince.