The EU on Wednesday said it is ending its election observation mission in Haiti, calling the decision to cancel last fall’s election results unjustified. European Commission Vice President Federica Mogherini announced the decision to pull out of the island nation in a statement, saying that “the conditions were not met for the continuation of its activities in Haiti.”
Haiti annulled last year’s controversial first-round presidential election results on the recommendation of an independent commission that found fraud had tainted the vote.
In another EU statement released on Wednesday, the head of the EU observer mission, Elena Valenciano, said the work of Haiti’s independent commission “had many factual, legal, methodological and conceptual weaknesses.”
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She added in her statement that, according to the findings of European observers, last year’s elections “were generally in line with international standards, despite some flaws and irregularities, and not likely to affect the overall results.”
The US, a major aid donor to Haiti, also on Wednesday expressed disappointment that Haitian authorities opted to cancel the results and schedule a rerun.
“The Haitian people deserve to have their voices heard, not deferred,” US Department of State spokesman Mark Toner said, adding that the Oct. 25 last year results should stand.
Local activists often accuse the US of picking sides in Haiti’s chaotic political scene. Last year’s poll results were widely disputed by the opposition, who condemned the vote as an “electoral coup” in favor of the party of then-president Michel Martelly.
Martelly’s hand-picked candidate Jovenel Moise won with 32.76 percent of the vote against Jude Celestin’s 25.29 percent.
Initially set for Dec. 27, last year, the runoff was postponed twice as protests broke out. An interim government replaced Martelly after he departed in February without a successor.
In an attempt to overcome political crisis the independent evaluation committee studied electoral documents for a month, concluding in late May that the vote should be canceled.
The commission’s president Francois Benoit said it was impossible to trace the origin of 40 percent of the ballots.
More than seven months after the initial poll, the Haitian Provisional Electoral Council on Monday announced a new electoral timetable, setting the first round for Oct. 9 and the second for Jan. 8, next year.
The EU initially deployed its mission to the island nation in July last year at the invitation of Haitian authorities.
The observation mission’s statement echoes much of the international community’s reservations concerning Haiti’s decision.
Representatives from Western countries and the UN worry that an election rerun would have serious financial consequences for the poorest country in the Americas.
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