1988 Haitian general election explained

General elections were held in Haiti on 17 January 1988,[1] after the 1987 general election had been cancelled due to an election day massacre of voters either orchestrated or condoned by the Haitian military.[2] The elections were boycotted by most candidates who had contested the previous elections, and while the official voter turnout figure was stated to be around 35%, observers and foreign officials estimated it to be no more than 10%,[3] with some putting it at lower than 4%.[2]

The official results were made public on 24 January, and it was a victory for Leslie Manigat of the Rally of Progressive National Democrats.[4] However, six months later, he was removed from office in a military coup on 20 June.[2]

Results

President

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. http://www.cartercenter.org/news/documents/doc1379.html Haiti's Election Needs Help
  3. Country Report: Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Puerto Rico, 1988, p21
  4. Web site: Leslie Manigat, elegido presidente de Haití . El País . 25 January 1988 . 1 January 2016 . Spanish.