Electoral council certifies Maduro
Protests break out in Venezuela
CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuela’s government-friendly electoral council quickly certified the razor-thin presidential victory of Hugo Chavez’ hand-picked successor Monday, apparently ignoring opposition demands for a recount as anti-government protests broke out in the bitterly polarized nation.
People stood on balconies banging pots and pans in protest as the electoral council’s president proclaimed Nicolas Maduro president for the next six years. In the evening, they did it again, a raucous clanging in neighborhoods rich and poor, including the one surrounding the presidential palace where Maduro was holding a news conference. Maduro was sworn in as acting president after Chavez’s March 5 death from cancer.
In the afternoon, thousands of young people clashed with National Guard troops in riot gear who fired tear gas and plastic bullets to keep the protesters from marching on the city center. The demonstrators threw stones and pieces of concrete. Protests also were reported in provincial cities.
There were no immediate reports of injuries.
Maduro was elected Sunday by a margin of 50.8 percent to 49 percent over challenger Henrique Capriles – a difference of just 262,000 votes out of 14.9 million cast, according to an updated official count released Monday.
Until every vote is counted, Venezuela has an “illegitimate president and we denounce that to the world,” Capriles tweeted Monday.
One of the five members of the National Electoral Council, independent Vicente Diaz, also backed a full recount, as did the United States and the Organization of American States.
But the electoral council president, Tibisay Lucena, said in announcing the outcome Sunday that it was “irreversible.” At the proclamation ceremony Monday, she defended Venezuela’s electronic vote system as bullet-proof.
Capriles, a 40-year-old state governor, had demanded the proclamation be suspended.
Maduro’s campaign manager, Jorge Rodriguez, called Capriles’ actions “a coup attempt,” while Maduro alleged such a plot was in preparation.