 Learn welcome to the International Daily Roundup with People's Dispatch where we bring you some of the top stories from across the globe. Let's take a look at today's headlines. Protests continue across Haiti against the US back regime of criminal moist. Ecuadorian Electoral Council announces partial recount on the run-off elections, uncertain to. US Senate equits Donald Trump on incitement of insurrection charge in impeachment trial. Protests in Bahrain to commemorate 10th anniversary of Arab Spring. Protests against the regime of de facto President Havana and moist are continuing across Haiti, thousands gathered in the capital of Port-au-Prince on Sunday under the banner of the March Against Dictatorship. Haitians are demanding that moist step down and transfer power to a transitional government in accordance with the Constitution. The US back moist has been ruling by decree since 2020 after suspending parliamentary elections. He has also set up a committee to draft a new constitution which will reportedly be put to a referendum next month. Though his term was supposed to end on February 7th, 2021, he has refused to step down until 2022. Protests are gathered at the airport crossroads in the Del Mar's commune and marched onto road 60, which returned to the capital. It was here that the Haitian National Police forces attacked protesters with tear gas. Officers also fired live ammunition into the crowd, leading to at least two injuries and one death. Journalists covering the march were also attacked with rubber bullets causing three to be injured. Meanwhile, opposition parties have agreed on the plan to appoint a transitional government for a two-year period. This is following a declaration on February 8th that moist's term had ended according to Article 134, Section 2 of the Constitution. The opposition has also appointed Supreme Court Judge Joseph Messini Jean-Louis to serve as interim president. The National Electoral Council of Ecuador has announced a partial recount of the votes cast in the February 7th presidential elections. The council made the announcement on Saturday amid continuing uncertainty regarding who will be the second candidate in addition to Andrea Rao's another round of elections on April 11th. The recount will take place following requests from second place contenders Jacopérez and Valermo Lasso. However, Lasso later issued a statement on February 14th, partially retracting the terms of his request. Reports from tells the state that Lasso from the right-wing Triando Opportunidades Movement and Social Christian Party Alliance received 19.66% of the votes as per recent partial counts. Jacopérez from the Indigenous Pachacutic Party received 19.61% of the votes, placing him in the technical tie with Lasso for second place. Both candidates held a meeting with the magistrates of the Electoral Council and election observers from the Organization of American States as a result of the agreement signed in the meeting, a partial recount will take place in 17 out of the 24 provinces in Ecuador. 100% of the votes in Gaias province and 50% of the votes in the other 16 provinces will be recounted. Lasso has now issued a statement saying that he will support a full recount in Gaias and a partial recount in six other provinces if there is a consensus among candidates. Progressive candidate Andrea Araus from the Union of Hope Alliance emerged the leading candidate in the first round securing 32.06% of the votes. The US Senate has acquitted from President Donald Trump on the charge of incitement to insurrection. Seven Republicans joined the Democrats to vote to convict the majority of 57 to 43 votes on February 13th. However, they felt 10 votes short of the two-thirds majority necessary for a conviction. This is the second time Trump has been acquitted by the Senate after being impeached by the House of Representatives. The central argument presented by Trump's defense team was that the impeachment charge and subsequent trial were unconstitutional. They argued that a foreign president could not be put on trial for impeachment. This was echoed by a majority of the Republican party which had voted that a trial was unconstitutional on February 9th. However, Democrats, along with six Republicans, had defeated that vote with the 56 to 44 majority. The Democrats had argued that Trump must be held accountable for the actions he committed in office. The focus was on the January 6th riot in the US Capitol building and Trump's unsubstantiated claims of electoral fraud. His defense team argued that Trump was exercising his First Amendment rights to free speech, meanwhile several Trump supporters who participated in the Capitol riot have admitted to law enforcement that they were broadly following his call. While Trump has been acquitted by the Senate, he will now face an investigation in the state of Georgia over an attempt to overturn the election results. This follows a phone call between Trump and Georgia state election officials in January. Trump was heard threatening and pressurizing officials to decarbonize electoral votes to swing the election in his favor. For a final story, we go to Bahrain where several protests were held to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Arab Spring, a uprising of 2011. Protesters gathered on February 13 and 14 to demand the removal of the ruling al-Khalifa dynasty and for the establishment of democracy. The al-Khalifa dynasty has been accused of stifling political dissent and persecuting citizens on the basis of sectarian differences. A majority of the people in Bahrain belong to the sheer sect of Islam, whereas the ruling dynasty belongs to the Sunni sect. widespread protests for democracy in Bahrain had started in 2011, following similar uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, the way which is known now as the Arab Spring. However, the Bahraini state suppressed the protests by deploying armed forces from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies. The regime has since then led a sustained crackdown on all forms of dissent, including the imprisonment of pro-democracy human rights activists. The Bahraini state is also a close ally of the US and hosts its fifth fleet. The state also signed the US-mediated Abraham-A-Cords normalizing relations with Israel. This has spurred the increase in civil interposition to the regime that demands for democratic reforms to continue to grow. And this is all we have for this episode of the International Daily Roundup. For more substituent videos visit our website PeopleSuffer.org, subscribe to our YouTube channel, and follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Thank you for watching.