The University of the West IndiesCrosskill, Hugh (anchor)Kirton, Alan (interviewee)Timmins, Jerry (correspondent)Griffith, Leslie (interviewee)Roy, Louis (interviewee)Lafontant, Roger (interviewee)Bazin, Marc (interviewee)Aristide, Jean Bertrand (interviewee)Adams, Alvin (interviewee)Compton, John (interviewee)Khan, Sharief (correspondent)2016-01-192016-01-191990-12-14CAR0645https://hdl.handle.net/2139/413011. Headlines (00:00-00:37)2. Days before the elections, a massive crowd gathers in Port-au-Prince in support of Haitian presidential candidate, Jean-Bertrand Aristide . A member of one of the observer groups and General Secretary of the Caribbean Conference of Churches, Rev. Alan Kirton, speaks to Hugh Crosskill via a live telephone interview (00:38-02:40)3. Review of Haiti’s political events in the run-up to the upcoming presidential elections. The special report features Jerry Timmins; Leslie Griffith, Methodist Minister; Louis Roy, Head of the Council of State; Roger Lafontant; Marc Brazin, presidential candidate; Jean-Bertrand Aristide, presidential candidate; Alvin Adams, US Ambassador to Haiti; and John Compton, Prime Minister of St. Lucia (02:41-12:08)4. The live interview with Rev. Alan Kiston reconvenes in which he expounds on the Lafontant factor disrupting the democratic process of free and fair elections (12:09-12:53)5. Controversy is mounting in Guyana over the implementation of the electoral reforms agreed on by President Hoyte following Jimmy carter’s visit to Georgetown. A major row is building between Guyana’s ruling party, the opposition parties and other groups. Sharief Khan reports (12:54-14:50)Stereo 192 bit rate MP3;44,100 Mega bits;16 bit14 min. 53 sec.Sound, mp3enCopyright British Broadcasting CorporationElections -- HaitiHaiti -- Politics and government -- HistoryGuyana -- Politics and governmentElection law -- GuyanaElections -- Violence -- HaitiCaribbean Report 14-12-1990Recording, oralAccess to this collection is available on site at the Main Library, Mona Campus (main.library@uwimona.edu.jm), Jamaica and The Alma Jordan Library (wimail@sta.uwi.edu), St. Augustine Campus, Trinidad and Tobago.