As one of Haiti’s most famous musicians drives down the two-lane Delmas roadway in Port-au-Prince, scattered calls in the street

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问题     As one of Haiti’s most famous musicians drives down the two-lane Delmas roadway in Port-au-Prince, scattered calls in the street grow into a trembling chant in Haitian Creole (the language of Haiti) :"Pwezidan, Pwezidan"—"President, President. " But the young men shouting the words are not calling to Wyclef Jean, who just announced he was running for President of Haiti. They were greeting Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly, the bad boy of the Haitian musical genre kompa who just happens to want to be the country’s President too.
    Better known for the eyebrow-raising lyrics and his ability to rouse even the most conservative of Haitian elites to dance on top of tables, Martelly, 49, dressed in a suit on Thursday to submit his paperwork to run for President on the ticket of his party Repons Peyizan, or Countrymen’s Response. He acknowledges that comparisons will be made between himself and Jean. But Martelly says despite being opponents for the presidency, he and Jean are friends. Martelly appeared on Jean’s first solo album The Carnival in 1997. But Martelly jokes,"He’s global and I’m local. " And he says what sets him apart from the rest of the presidential field—his friend included—is the Haitian people’s true affinity for him.
    "You need to be loved by the people, cherished by them, trusted by them," Martelly says, shifting fluidly from Creole to English to French. "I’m not running to be President. I’m running to be the citizen who changes things. I want to be the inspirateur"—the inspirer.
    Martelly never falls short of inspiring attention. On the road to submit his paperwork, his car passes a mob of Jean supporters. But after honking his blaring car horn, the crowd quickly recognizes Martelly and changes directions. The group starts pouncing on Martelly’s car chanting, "We will die with you," perhaps a sign of Haiti’s fickle voter. Half the population of about 9 million is under 25. "I will follow whoever has the most support," says Ricardo Priville, 29, dressed in a Jean T-shirt but reaching for Martelly as the star exits his car.
    Martelly is also being supported by Jean’s former Fugees band member Pras Michel. Michel admits Martelly is the underdog financially in the race to the National Palace, but he argues that Martelly connects to the Haitian people like no one else.
    Martelly has yet to release a comprehensive recovery plan, but he says it will promote foreign investments and tourism to help bolster the economy in the poorest country of the western hemisphere. Right now, the Nov. 28 election might seem more like Haitian Idol than a presidential race, but Martelly insists he’s putting his bad-boy persona to rest and focusing on serious issues. "This is serious business," says Martelly. "The carnival is over."
It can be inferred from the text that Martelly’s recovery plan_________.

选项 A、will rely on the western countries
B、is unfavorable to his Nov. 28 election
C、will utilize the overseas resources
D、made him a bad-boy image in Haiti

答案C

解析 细节题。末段首句提及“马特里的全面恢复计划还没有发布,但是他表示该计划将拉动境外对海地的投资和观光旅游业的发展”,由此可推知,[C]与之相符,故为答案。[A]将海外投资混淆为western countries,故排除;[B]和[D]含义与原文相反,此计划并未对其造成负面影响,故都排除。
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