Your questions made me go looking for more on Martelly. Your doubts and suspicions are founded.
According to article below, he does not appear to be the "Sweet Micky" the AP and others are foisting. I too was under the impression that he was merely a pop singer very popular in Haiti, especially with the younger voters who do not remember the Papa Doc and Baby Doc regimes. And that he would win the runoff.
It may be that the AP et all are simply ignorant of his background, but one can bet that the CIA/State are not. If what the author below writes is true, then it would appear that the U.S./France/Canada may be attempting to put a "stealth duvalierist" back in power.
That seven-member "international report" by the U.S./France/Canada plus Jamaica on the Nov. 28 elections was handed over to the OAS and Insulza went to Port-au-Prince last week to present it to Preval. Have not seen any report of what transpired, but before Insulza arrived, Preval already had rejected it. Preval was reported pissed because the report was leaked to the media before Insulza went to P-a-P but that appears to me to be a phony excuse. Something deeper is afoot and maybe even Preval is against it (such as the imposition by the U.S./France/Canada of a new, pro-duvalier government?
Also I wondered why Brazil was not on the international commission, given that it has led the U.N. forces in Haiti. As for the other Latam nations, Hil and company would have nixed that.
Will have to sort all this out to see if indeed the "fix" is in to rig the runoff in favor of Martelly. The arrival of Baby Doc muddied the waters even more, and maybe it was to help Martelly get elected. :shrug:
Article below goes into much deeper detail on Sweet Micky, and it is not flattering. (check out the pro and anti comments on the story)
By Jeb Sprague
Photo by Wadner Pierre
...In the media coverage of Haiti's ongoing electoral crisis, presidential candidate Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly, whom ruling Unity party candidate Jude Célestin edged out of Haiti's Jan. 16 run-off by less than 1%, has been portrayed as the victim of voting fraud and the leader of a populist upsurge against Haiti’s crooked Provisional Electoral Council (CEP).
Some have questioned his presidential suitability by pointing to his vulgar antics as a konpa musician over the last two decades, where he often made demeaning comments about women and periodically dropped his trousers to bare his backside. The real problem with Martelly, however, is not his perceived immorality, but his heinous political history and close affiliation with the reactionary “forces of darkness," as they are called in Haiti, which have snuffed out each genuine attempt Haitians have made over the past 20 years to elect a democratic government. Far from a champion of democracy, Martelly has been a cheerleader for, and perhaps even a participant in, bloody coups d'état and military rule.
Duvalierist Affinities
Under the Duvalier dictatorship, Martelly ran the Garage, a nightclub patronized by army offi cers and members of Haiti’s tiny ruling class. At a recent press conference, Martelly spoke nostalgically of the Duvalierist era, when François "Papa Doc" Duvalier and later his son Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" enforced their iron rule with gun and machete wielding Tonton Macoutes, a sort of Haitian Gestapo. “Today the dog is eating its vomit," lamented Marcus Garcia of Radio Mélodie FM in a Dec. 8 editorial. While "Michel Martelly openly defends the Duvalier regime in a press conference,” the youth who have been duped into supporting him are “without memory of
Fort Dimanche-Fort La mort, without memory of the Nov. 29, 1987 electoral massacre,” when neo-Duvalierist thugs killed hundreds of would-be voters.
http://www.dominionpaper.ca/weblogs/wadner_pierre/3799
Wiki on Martelly:
The middle-class son of a petroleum plant supervisor, Martelly taught himself to play the piano by ear. After graduating from high school and unsuccessfully attempting to study medicine, Martelly was briefly enlisted in the Haitian Military Academy before dropping out. He emigrated to the United States with an American wife, where he enrolled at Red Rocks Community College in Lakewood, Colorado and worked in a local grocery store. In 1986, after just one semester, he divorced and returned to Haiti just as Jean-Claude Duvalier, then president-for-life, was heading into exile. He returned stateside with his then-girlfriend, Sophia, and married her in Miami, Florida and had his first child, Olivier. Martelly continued to work on a construction site for a year until moving back to Haiti in 1987. Upon their return to Haiti, Martelly began playing keyboard as a fill-in gigger in local venues in Petionville and Kenscoff, suburbs of Port-au-Prince.
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Martelly's friendship with members of Haiti's past governments and with U.S. diplomats has been met with mixed opinions and criticism by music fans and activists alike. Martelly is reportedly a friend of President Rene Preval, and has previously acknowledged such friendships as well as the one with Lt. Col. Michel François, the former Port-au-Prince police chief.
Prior to the coup that overthrew Duvalier, Martelly operated a nightclub called the Garage, often frequented by military and other members of the ruling class. Later, after a second coup had overthrown Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Martelly played a free concert to oppose the return of the ousted Haitian president and any American presence on the troubled island. The charismatic Martelly refused to back down from criticism of his affiliations with politicians and government officials. As he once stated to a news reporter, "I don't have to defend myself....It's my right. It's my country. I can fight for whatever I believe in.<1>"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_Micky