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Article Excerpt A Haitian election has come and gone, to little notice.
The June 21 election was the runoff of the first round in April to fill 11 vacant seats in the 30-member Senate. Few contend these days that Haiti, shorn up as it is by a massive UN peacekeeping presence, enjoys anything resembling a functioning democracy, but the turnout in this election seems to indicate that most people are done with even the pretense. If anyone can claim victory, it is the largest of Haiti's political parties, Fanmi Lavalas, which organized a boycott of this election. This is the second of two successful poll-shunning exercises, the first being the April first round; hence its name, Operation Closed Door II.
Lavalas organized the boycott in response to the party's exclusion from the process....
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More articles from NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs
GUATEMALA'S PRESIDENT APPEARS TO HAVE WEATHERED POLITICAL CRISIS, BUT ..., June 25, 2009
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