Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Amy Bracken
- In the pre-dawn darkness of a town with scarce electricity, the dusty streets churned with the quiet but hurried movement of a population determined to vote.
In the pre-dawn darkness of a town with scarce electricity, the dusty streets churned with the quiet but hurried movement of a population determined to vote.
In high schools-cum voting centres in the seaside slum Raboteau, election workers scrambled to get ready for the oncoming crowd. Some sorted through ballots for president and legislators with one hand, holding up a dripping candle with the other.
After two years of rule by an unelected government, and after four Election Day postponements, the Haitian people were finally voting.
Exactly two years ago, the anti-government gang that dominated Raboteau stormed the town’s police headquarters, burning the building, killing police officers, and launching a rebellion that would lead to the ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide three weeks later.
In September 2004, much of Gonaives was destroyed by floods that killed more than 2,000 people. The rest of the last two years in Haiti have been marked by a decline in an economy that was already the weakest in the hemisphere, and ongoing gang violence and political unrest.
“I’m here because I want a change in my country,” he said. “I’ve never been employed in my life because there’s no employment in this country. That’s the change I want because I have three children, and school is expensive. There should be state-funded school for everyone.”
The hope and determination of many Haitians have been put to the test. Some 80 percent of eligible Haitians registered to vote this year – one of the highest rates in the world, according to an Organisation of American States (OAS) spokesperson.
But many of those who registered still faced hurdles. Voter ID cards, made by a Mexican company contracted by the OAS, came in behind schedule. Many who had registered reported walking long distances almost daily to see if their voter card had arrived yet..
On Monday afternoon, the eve of elections, there were still dozens of people waiting in line to pick up their voter cards.
Others discovered problems when they picked up their cards. Some found they were being sent kilometres away to vote despite the presence of polling centres in their neighbourhoods. Some didn’t know how to get to their assigned voting centres, and some were assigned to a centre outside their own political districts, making it impossible to vote for their own representatives in Parliament.
One candidate for the lower house said he could not vote for himself, and election workers said some people in a region south of Gonaives were assigned to voting centres 27 kilometres from home.
Still, electoral observers predicted that logistical problems in and of themselves were unlikely to change the outcome of the vote. They said violence was a more significant concern. But tensions were high in some areas due to logistical problems.
Though observers reported no organised violence, there were four elections-related deaths and some injuries. Two individuals died after being swept up in pushing and shoving crowds outside voting centres in greater Port-au-Prince. Local radio reported one suffocated and one fainted.
Later, police reacted to increasing tension in a crowd outside a voting centre by shooting into the air. One police officer shot and killed a member of the crowd, and other members of the crowd reacted by killing the police with machetes.
Electoral problems around the capital were largely straightened out in the course of the day. Voting centres across the metropolitan area were slow to open, and one large voting centre for the residents of the sprawling slum Cite Soleil was nowhere near readiness for use, infuriating would-be voters.
The centre, meant to accommodate several thousand voters, never opened. Hundreds took to the streets to protest, marching into Port-au-Prince, and chanting, “Vote or no vote, Preval is president!”
Rene Garcia Preval, Aristide’s hand-picked successor as president in the latter half of the 1990s, is the front-runner across Haiti, and especially in some of the capital’s poorest neighbourhoods.
At midday Tuesday, the national electoral council held a press conference, calling for calm and assuring that Cite Soleil residents could vote at other centres. By the end of the day, observers reported that most of Cite Soleil’s 60,000 registered voters had cast their ballots. And across the country, voting centre crowds diminished throughout the day, and closing times were extended to allow everyone to vote.
Asked about the Election Day killings, U.N. mission spokesman Damian Onses-Cardona said it was not an important part of the elections. What is the most important part? “The high turnout,” he said. “Absolutely.”
Some voters expressed a similar optimism – especially those who had already voted. Jesuit Gentil stood outside one of the largest voting centres in Gonaives, where more than 18,000 people were assigned to vote. His thumbnail was coloured with black marker to show he had cast his ballot.
“The vote went well,” he said, “and it’s a pleasure for me today to see the Haitian people have the will to choose an honest, credible president to represent them.”
Amy Bracken
- In the pre-dawn darkness of a town with scarce electricity, the dusty streets churned with the quiet but hurried movement of a population determined to vote.
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