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Jovenel Moise, candidate backed by former leader, wins Haiti’s presidential election

Electoral posters of Haitian presidential candidates Jude Celestin, top, and Jovenel Moise are seen on a street in Port-au-Prince. Moise has won the election, according to preliminary results.
Electoral posters of Haitian presidential candidates Jude Celestin, top, and Jovenel Moise are seen on a street in Port-au-Prince. Moise has won the election, according to preliminary results.
(Hector Retamal / AFP/Getty Images)
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Jovenel Moise, the handpicked candidate of Haiti’s previous elected leader, apparently won the presidential election outright against 26 rivals, according to preliminary results announced late Monday that gave him 55.6% of the votes.

Moise was the leading contender in first-round presidential balloting last year and headed for a runoff. But the second round was repeatedly derailed amid fraud allegations and the results were eventually annulled after a Haitian commission reported finding what appeared to be significant irregularities and misconduct.

This time no runoff will apparently be needed because Moise, an agricultural entrepreneur and candidate of former President Michel Martelly’s Tet Kale party, got over 50% in the Nov. 20 election redo and also led his nearest competitor by well over 25 percentage points. Either result was enough to win under Haiti’s election rules.

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“The Haitian people have made their choice and voted for me in the first round. Thank you all for your trust. Long live Haiti!” Moise wrote on his Twitter account.

Second-place candidate Jude Celestin of the Lapeh political party had 19.5% in the preliminary count announced by electoral officials. The third place finisher, Moise Jean-Charles, got 11%.

The final count will be turned over to Haiti’s electoral tribunal, where political parties can dispute the results before electoral winners are certified Dec. 29.

Before the preliminary results were announced, Justice Minister Camille Edouard Junior said authorities were on “high alert” to ensure security in Haiti, where riots have often greeted the announcement of election tallies.

Caretaker President Jocelerme Privert said that losing factions should follow the appeals process set out by Haiti’s election rules and not resort to street protests and possible violence.

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