
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Shops opened sporadically, the airport took in cargo flights and fewer flaming barricades blocked streets Friday as Haiti’s capital struggled to emerge from two days of riots over the disputed presidential election.
Officials worked behind the scenes to find a solution to the political crisis as an influential U.S. senator called for U.S. aid to be cut off to Haiti until a fair and democratic outcome to the election is found.
Demonstrators clashed occasionally with U.N. peacekeepers and Haitian police, but overall conditions improved somewhat as the political factions awaited the results of a recount by the country’s elections board.
Preliminary results showed that two candidates — former first lady and law professor Mirlande Manigat and businessman Jude Celestin of the governing Unity party — were the top vote-getters in the Nov. 28 election and would compete in a January runoff.
All the candidates, including the apparent winners, claim the election was marred by fraud.
The strongest objections, however, are coming from the third-place finisher, singer Michel Martelly, whose supporters flooded the streets in protest after preliminary results said he narrowly missed the runoff. Martelly said Friday that he expected the new count of ballots by the Provisional Electoral Council, or CEP, to show he won the election.
“We are expecting the CEP to come back on their results and acknowledge the fraud because it’s the people’s vote they are playing with and the people are very upset,” Martelly said. “We can only wait and hope at the same time and ask for them to wake up and do what’s right for the country.”
But even if the recount puts him in the runoff, the candidate, known on stage as “Sweet Mickey,” said he would not compete if Celestin is still in the race. He claims that Celestin, a member of President Rene Preval’s party, made it to the runoff only because his supporters committed fraud.
U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy, chairman of a Senate subcommittee that oversees appropriations for Haiti, said Friday that the election results showed the Haitian government was trying to “subvert the will of the people.”
The Vermont Democrat said the Obama administration should withhold funding to Haiti’s government and suspend U.S. travel visas for senior Haitian officials.



