AP NEWSBREAK: NEW COUNT HITS GOV'T CANDIDATE
(Washington Post) - By Jonathan M. Katz (AP)
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- An international monitoring team will recommend that Haiti's government-backed candidate be eliminated from a presidential runoff election in favor of a popular musician who finished a close third in the contested official results, according to a copy of its report obtained Monday by The Associated Press.
The report by a team from the Organization of American States team was to be presented on Monday to President Rene Preval.
The report had not been released publicly, but the AP obtained a copy and a foreign official with direct knowledge of the report confirmed its conclusions. A second foreign official confirmed that the report was in its final stages of editing and translation into French, but that the conclusion would stand.
Haitian electoral officials must make the final decision on what to do, but the team's recommendations could weigh heavily. Three candidates believe they should advance to a second-round vote. Rioting broke out in several Haitian cities when the preliminary results were announced.
Preval is not expected to respond publicly until after Wednesday's one-year anniversary of the Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake.
The second round was originally scheduled for Sunday Jan. 16 but was delayed in part because electoral officials were waiting for the results of the OAS review aimed at solving the deadlock. Officials have said that the earliest it can be held is next month.
The experts found that tens of thousands more votes than previously thought should be discarded because polling-place officials did not follow procedures or because there were signs that the tally sheets had been altered.
"After a thorough statistical analysis ... the Expert Mission has determined that it cannot support the preliminary results of the presidential elections released on Dec. 7, 2010," the report said.
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