OAS Stakeholders meet on Haiti’s
Preparation for November Elections
Haiti’s state of readiness for
the November 28, 2010 General
Election was this week reviewed by
key stakeholders at the Organization
of American States (OAS) in
Washington, D.C.
Representatives of Member States
and Permanent Observers of the OAS
participated in a meeting of the
“Haiti Group of Friends” on
Wednesday on the issue.
OAS Assistant Secretary General
and Chair of the Group of Friends of
Haiti, Ambassador Albert Ramdin
informed the meeting of some of the
challenges being faced by Haiti’s
Office of National Identity (ONI)
and Haitian citizens in the lead up
to the election.
The Assistant Secretary General,
who met a day earlier with the
director of Haiti’s ONI, said the
registration process was being
challenged by limited technical
resources, given the large amount of
Haitian citizens trying to register
to vote 2 months before the polls.
Ambassador Ramdin indicated that
Haitians were also concerned about
the possibility of tropical storms
ahead of the election, which could
compromise the electoral process
since thousands of Haitians are
still living in tent cities.
“While the international
community, for good reason, is
focusing on the electoral process
and the politics of the country, we
must not forget that there are still
millions of Haitians living in very
difficult circumstances.
Approximately 1.2 million Haitians
are still living in tents and do not
having fundamental necessities,”
Ambassador Ramdin stated. “Those are
not the best circumstances to have a
population go into an electoral
process and this is one of the
concerns we should keep in mind for
the next two months,” he added.
The Assistant Secretary General
of the OAS also referred to tasks
now being carried out by the joint
OAS-CARICOM Electoral Observation
Mission (EOM), which is headed by
Caricom Assistant Secretary General
Colin Granderson. The joint
initiative is responsible for the
deployment of approximately 200
observers, across Haiti.
The Permanent Representative of
Haiti to the OAS, Ambassador Duly
Brutus, also took the floor,
thanking the OAS and the
international community for the
support provided for the elections.
Citizen participation and political
stability, he said, were critical to
facilitate the reconstruction of the
country after the earthquake.
Ambassador Ramdin also referred
to the immediate needs of Haitian
school children, who remain without
basic school supplies. To this end
he urged support for the OAS
“Backpacks for Haiti’s Children”
initiative. (For more information
visit http://www.oas.org/en/member_states/haiti/backpack/default.html
)
For more information, please
visit the OAS Website at
www.oas.org