BY JACQUELINE CHARLES
jcharles@MiamiHerald.com
Haitian
first lady Sophia Martelly’s hopes of a political career in Haiti’s Senate may
have been dashed.
Several
sources including a local Port-au-Prince radio program, known for breaking
scoops, said late Tuesday that the National Bureau of Electoral Disputes (BCEN)
has rejected her candidacy.
Richardson
Dumel, the spokesman for Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), told the
Miami Herald that “a decision hasn’t been announced yet.”
Martelly filed last month to run for the
Haitian Senate in the upcoming Aug. 9 elections in hopes of representing the West
department, which includes Port-au-Prince. But her candidacy was quickly
challenged on the grounds that she was an American citizen, and as someone in
charge of a government committee tasked with administering State funds, she
lacked the necessary document showing she properly spent the money. She was
also accused of voting in the 2010 presidential elections as a U.S. citizen,
which wasn’t allowed before amendments to the Constitution recognizing dual
nationality were published.
Despite
the passing of the amendments and the National Palace leaking a document
showing that Martelly had renounced her American citizenship, jurists in Haiti
have disagreed on whether she qualifies to run under the changes. Some say she
does, while others say she would have had to give up her U.S. passport when she
became an adult at 18.
Initially,
Martelly’s candidacy was accepted by the elections commission and she was given
the green light to proceed. The decision, however, was appealed and the BCEN
was formed to hear the dispute. In total, the panel was tasked with ruling on
17 disputes involving 16 candidates; two of the challenges were brought against
Martelly.
The
decision on Martelly’s fate has been long awaited but it had been held up by
money, according to Haiti’s Le Nouvelliste. On Tuesday, the newspaper said that
each of the BCEN’s six lawyers were requesting a $31,538 payout while each of
the three judges were requesting $25,231 in fees before making their decision
public.
The CEP
finally settled the dispute by agreeing to pay each of the lawyers and judges
about $10,000 each for 30 days worth of work.
Dumel
said a total of 2,039 candidates have registered to participate in the upcoming
parliament elections for 20 Senate seats and the entire lower chamber, which
increased from 99 to 118 seats. On Monday, Haiti began the registration for its
presidential elections, which are scheduled for Oct. 25 with a runoff on Dec.
27 if no one wins the vote outright.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/haiti/article20797062.html#storylink=cpy
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