OAS Insider Reveals Details of Illegal Foreign Intervention Against Haitian Democracy
OAS Insider Reveals Details of Illegal Foreign Intervention Against Haitian Democracy
February 25, 2014
Detailed Account of Proposed Coup Against Préval; Overturning of Haitian Elections
Washington, D.C. - In 2010, a secret core group of foreign dignitaries sought to force the president of Haiti out of office in a coup. They also engineered an intervention in Haitis presidential elections that year that ensured that the governing partys candidate would not proceed to a runoff. These are the revelations being made by the Organization of American States (OAS) Special Representative to Haiti at the time, Ricardo Seitenfus. In an exclusive interview published by Dissent Magazine, Seitenfus who was present at some of these meetings - describes these and other bombshells detailed in his new book being published in his native Brazil, titled International Crossroads and Failures in Haiti.
In the written interview with Dan Beeton of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) and journalist Georgianne Nienaber, Seitenfus provides new details regarding threats against then-president of Haiti René Préval. Seitenfus also corroborates the conclusions of CEPRs earlier analysis of an OAS Expert Mission sent to verify the election: that the OAS overturned the results of the first round in a political intervention. The OAS took this unprecedented step without so much as a recount or calling for a new election, something that had never been done before by an international body. This was a white coup and a blatant electoral intervention, Seitenfus says.
When it comes to Haiti, the international community does not have limits for the actions it takes, Seitenfus writes in the interview.
The OAS Expert Mission, most of its members coming from the U.S., Canada and France, recommended changing the result of the first round of the election after findings that CEPRs analysis determined to be methodologically and statistically flawed, and arbitrary. The international community especially the U.S. government then exerted strong pressure for the Haitian government to accept the missions recommendations, which would remove governing party candidate Jude Célestin from the runoff, to be replaced by Michel Martelly. Martelly went on to win the second round of an election versus another conservative opponent, Mirlande Manigat, with less than 17 percent of the vote from the eligible electorate.
Seitenfus account of events corroborates the results of this statistical analysis:
More:
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/press-releases/press-releases/oas-insider-reveals-details-of-illegal-foreign-intervention-against-haitian-democracy