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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Feb. 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Masses of
Haitian voters flocked to polling stations on Tuesday to participate in the
long-awaited presidential and parliamentary elections, overwhelming election
officials who struggled to handle the large turnout.
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| Eager Haitians wait outside a polling
staion in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Feb. 7.
(Xinhua) | "The people have voted massively," said UN special envoy
Juan Gabriel Valdes after election officials extended the voting period for
several hours.
Voters queued in long lines patiently in the capital
outside polling stations which were opened three hours late, defying
temperatures above 30 degrees Celsius.
Authorities said that polling stations would not
close until all the people had gotten their chance to vote.
"I don't mind waiting for two, three even four hours,
to vote: I have already waited two years," a young Haitian told Xinhua.
In a polling station in the capital's Sonapi
Industrial Area, a chaotic atmosphere reigned, and election staff offered help
to voters.
Roadblocks were set up on the
street outside the polling station and motorbikes were banned, outlawing the
most popular transport tool used by foreign journalists.
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| UN peacekeepers from Brazil patrol on a
road in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Feb. 7. (Xinhua) |
Authorities said that during the last Haitian
elections, a large number of murders and assaults were committed by
motorcyclists.
Former members of Haiti's now-defunct armed forces,
frequently a source of violence in the past, have called on Haitians to vote
peacefully.
But there still have been three people killed in
election-related violence, according to local media.
Two deaths occurred in Gros-Morne in the north of
Haiti, while another one was killed and several injured in the capital in
stampedes caused by voters trying to get their votes registered in polling
stations.
Opinion polls give former president Rene Garcia
Preval a substantial lead.
Garcia returned to the northern Haitian town of
Marmelade, where he grew up, on Monday night.
The elections, which had been postponed four times
for security reasons, were being observed by the UN, the European Union, the
United States' National Institute for Democracy and the International
Organization of Francophones.
Haitians were to elect the president, 30 senators and 99 deputies in the elections. To win outright, a presidential candidate has to win more than 50 percent of the votes. Enditem
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