July 26, 2010 -- During a recent meeting of the Group of Friends of Haiti, the Assistant
Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), Albert
R. Ramdin, informed that the hemispheric organization and the Caribbean
Community (CARICOM) will send a joint Electoral Observation Mission to
Haiti in preparation for the legislative and presidential elections of
November 28.
The Mission will be integrated by more than 150
people to be deployed throughout the Caribbean nation, and would be
charged with following the electoral process in the months before the
elections as well as the voting on Election Day. It is hoped that a
core group of people will arrive in Haiti at the beginning of August.
Ambassador
Ramdin said this is the first time the OAS and CARICOM have partnered
together to provide electoral observation assistance, explaining that
this new collaboration will allow them to be more effective.
“We
believe that if a country is in need of help, whether it’s political,
economic or social, or whether it is in need of technical assistance,
we need to work together with the subregional integration entity or
cooperation entity, in this case CARICOM,” he said, adding that
preparations for the November elections are moving ahead efficiently.
“From a technical perspective, preparations for the elections are well
on target, they are on schedule,” he explained. “So if everything goes
well in terms of technical preparation we believe we can have free,
fair and credible elections.”
Highlighting the importance of
timely elections in Haiti, Ramdin added that successful elections could
speed up the reconstruction process of the country. “If we have
elections at the end of the year, we may have a much better situation
by February next year to intensify the process of social and economic
reconstruction, and work towards sustainable development,” he added.
Legislative
elections in the Caribbean country were postponed after the January 12
earthquake. Since then, the OAS has been and will continue to be
involved in various aspects of the Haitian electoral process,
including: the registration of new voters, whose addresses changed
after the earthquake; providing technical assistance to the country’s
Provisional Electoral Council (CEP); and providing technical expertise
and equipment for the establishment of tabulation centers.