Saturday, December 4, 2010

Protests, fraud charges roil Haiti elections - Radio Stations

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti's elections ended in confusion on Sunday as 12 of the 18 presidential candidates denounced "massive fraud" and demanded the polls be annulled and street protests erupted over voting delays and problems.
The repudiation of the elections by so many of the presidential candidates dealt a blow to the credibility of the U.N.-supported poll. The international community was hoping the vote could produce a stable, legitimate government in the poor earthquake-ravaged Caribbean country.
Voters' frustration at not being able to cast their ballots due to organizational problems at many polling stations in the capital Port-au-Prince boiled over into street protests. At least one polling station was trashed by one angry group.
"We denounce a massive fraud that is occurring across the country. ... We demand the cancellation pure and simple of these skewed elections," the 12 presidential candidates said in a statement read to reporters at a Port-au-Prince hotel.
Still, Haiti's Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) said the elections went "well" at most of the more than 11,000 polling stations across the nation. "The CEP is comfortable with the vote," council president Gaillot Dorsainvil said.
Counting began after polls closed at 4 p.m. (2100 GMT).
After a day of confusion at many polling centers in the capital, some Haitians expressed anger at what they viewed as a wasteful, flawed exercise.
"Look what our government spends its money on," said Abellar Sony, brandishing a fistful of unused ballot papers at a polling station near the Cite Soleil slum. Children played with unmarked ballot papers, scattering them in the air.
The CEP acknowledged "some problems" and said it was trying to resolve them after the turbulent presidential and legislative elections went ahead amid a raging cholera epidemic and political tensions.
The 12 candidates denouncing the poll included all main opposition candidates. They accused outgoing President Rene Preval's Inite (Unity) coalition and its candidate, Jules Celestin, of trying to steal the elections.
Among them were prominent front-runners like former First Lady Mirlande Manigat, popular musician and entertainer Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly, and lawyer Jean-Henry Ceant.
The U.N. mission in Haiti and the Organization of American States/Caribbean Community elections observer mission said they were still gathering information on how the vote went.
Demonstrations flared in several parts of the sprawling capital, which still bears the scars of Haiti's devastating Jan. 12 earthquake. Local radio also reported protests against the electoral process in Gonaives and Les Cayes.
A protest of several thousand people in the capital's Petionville district was led by Martelly, joined by Haitian-American hip-hop star Wyclef Jean, who was barred from standing as a candidate by electoral officials in August.
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The Curling Network? Don't count on it - Game Shows

NEW YORK (Reuters) - After a stretch that has seen the creation of TV networks dedicated to the NFL, Major League Baseball, NBA and NHL, it is easy to wonder what's next.
A gymnastics channel? A cycling channel? How about a TV network devoted to curling, the sport of brooms and rocks most often seen during the Winter Olympics?
"It's hard to see that there's room for too many more (sports) networks," said Philippe Dauman, chief executive of Viacom Inc. "Pretty much everything that's out there today is covered."
Indeed, Dauman and other top executives speaking this week at the Reuters Global Media Summit warned that after a period of huge expansion the field of sports TV channels is in serious danger of becoming overcrowded.
The explosive growth in dedicated sports networks, as well as the ubiquity of sports on Walt Disney's ESPN and regional channels owned by News Corp's Fox and others, could extend to the U.S. Olympic Committee and World Wrestling Entertainment.
Both are eyeing creating their own networks down the road -- and for good reason. Leagues and sports properties see the potential that comes with strengthening a rabid fan base across the country while raking in the advertising dollars.
However, with rising sports programing costs sparking a chorus of complaints, count News Corp Chief Operating Officer Chase Carey among those skeptical that more sports networks can be sustained.
"People are carrying that a dimension too far," he said at the Reuters summit. "Everybody falls in love with it.
"You've had decades where it's been a quantity game and everybody's adding," he added. "You're actually now heading to a quality game and as you have more choice you really want to figure out how do you have quality channels as opposed to a strewn level of niche channels."
Viacom's Dauman said his MTV and Spike networks will schedule more sports-related shows, but launching a dedicated network is not in the cards.
"When people complain about the increase in programing costs, we have to recognize that a very large part of that is related to sports," Dauman added.
Disney's TV chief, Anne Sweeney, would prefer the leagues and teams ask themselves whether they can do a better job building their brands than her company's ESPN sports network.
"A key consideration is can I do for my fans what ESPN has traditionally done for their fans," she said.
Even Tony Petitti, chief of MLB Network, which had the most successful launch in cable TV history last year at 50 million U.S. homes, thinks any sport should first work to ensure broad distribution.
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UPDATE 1-Wal-Mart, Casino advance in Matahari unit sale-sources - Casino

* Carlyle fails to reach next round of bidding - sources
* Second-round bids due in December
(Adds details, background)
By Denny Thomas and Janeman Latul
HONG KONG/JAKARTA, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores Inc
(WMT.N), Casino Guichard-Perrachon SA (CASP.PA) and South Korea's
Lotte Shopping Co Ltd (023530.KS) have advanced to the next round
of bidding for Indonesian retailer Matahari Putra Prima PT's
(MPPA.JK) $1 billion sale of its hypermarket business, sources
with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
The auction comes on the heels of Carrefour SA's (CARR.PA)
sale of its outlets in Thailand, which brought the French
retailer a higher-than-expected $1.2 billion including debt.

Matahari's sale had drawn interest from private equity group
Carlyle Group [CYL.UL], but sources said the buyout group did not
make it to the second round. South Korea's Shinsegae Co Ltd
(004170.KS) had also expressed interest, but it was not clear
whether it was still in the running.
International retailers are jockeying for position in
emerging markets as they look for sources of growth outside
maturing U.S. and western European markets, although the cost of
competing is often too much to justify widespread expansion.
Matahari is selling Hypermart, Indonesia's second-biggest
hypermarket chain after PT Carrefour Indonesia, to focus on its
core healthcare and property assets.
Shortlisted parties had been asked to submit next-round bids
next month, a source said.
All companies mentioned in this report declined to comment.
Sources were not authorised to speak to media about the
auction as the sale process is confidential.
The sale is a seen as good opportunity to raise exposure in
Indonesia's retail sector, as a healthy economy, forecast to grow
6.0-6.2 percent this year, and a booming stock market lift
consumption in Southeast Asia's biggest economy.
It also comes just a few months after Matahari agreed to sell
a 90.76 percent stake in retail unit Matahari Department Store to
a joint venture with private equity group CVC Partners [CVC.UL]
for $770 million.
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