Venezuela to Hold Partial Audit of Recall Vote
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2004
CARACAS, Venezuela Hoping to defuse new political tension
in Venezuela, former President Jimmy Carter and other international
election monitors promised to double-check some voting results from
a referendum that failed to oust Venezuela's leader, Hugo Chavez,
after the opposition claimed the balloting was rigged.
On Wednesday, they will be witnesses as local election officials
check a random sampling of results from 150 voting stations, a
rare follow-up move to an election they have already said looked
clean.
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"We have no reason to doubt the integrity of the electoral
process nor the accuracy of the referendum results," Carter
asserted at a news conference Tuesday.
Carter and Cesar Gaviria, the head of the Organization of
American States, have been working for two years to find a solution
to the often bloody political crisis that has gripped Venezuela,
the world's fifth-largest oil exporting nation. Chavez is praised
by supporters for giving the poor majority better services and a
voice in politics, while some critics fear he intends to install a
Cuban-style dictatorship.
Carter and Gaviria on Monday endorsed results of Sunday's
referendum, in which Venezuelans voted by almost 58 percent to keep
the leftist firebrand in office.
Leaders of an opposition coalition immediately cried fraud and
called for mass demonstrations. Gunmen fired on an opposition
demonstration later Monday, wounding seven people including a woman
who died in a hospital on Tuesday. Dozens died in a failed coup
against Chavez in April 2002 and in political riots over several
years.
Unwilling to simply pack up and go home after giving their
blessing, Carter and Gaviria decided they needed to stick around.
On Wednesday, they and members of the OAS and Carter Center
staff will watch, along with representatives of the opposition, as
national election officials compare electronic and paper ballots.
The referendum was carried out on touch-screen voting machines,
which produced a paper receipt of each vote, much like an ATM.
Voters then deposited the receipts into a ballot box. Amid charges
that the electronic machines were rigged, the monitors will be
checking the results from the machines against the paper ballots to
make sure there are no major discrepancies. The paper ballots will
be checked at election offices while votes recorded in the machines
will be examined at an army base.
Carter made clear that the opposition would look foolish if it
keeps crying foul after the audit, which he said should be
completed by Thursday.
"It should be sufficient to address the remaining concerns that
have been expressed by the opposition," Carter said at the
nationally broadcast news conference.
In Washington, the State Department said the referendum should
end this South American nation's political crisis.
"The people of Venezuela have spoken," spokesman Adam Ereli
said. It was a conciliatory comment from the U.S. government, which
often has harsh words for Chavez, a blunt critic of U.S. foreign
policy.
Strengthened by his victory, Chavez is now setting his sights on
centralizing power, including exerting control over the courts,
local police and the nation's broadcast stations.
The government is "going to deepen the social and democratic
revolution in Venezuela," vowed Vice President Jose Vicente
Rangel, the right-hand man to Chavez.
Chavez said after his latest electoral victory that it would give
his government a "catalyzing energy" to carry out its
initiatives, including "completing the transformation of the
judicial branch."
Congress, which is controlled by supporters of Chavez, recently
approved a measure allowing that body to remove and appoint judges
to the Supreme Court. One Supreme Court justice has already been
ousted for allegedly falsifying his resume, a charge he denied.
The government is also seeking to exert control over TV and
radio stations, many of which are deeply critical of Chavez. The
government plans to submit a bill to Congress that would allow the
government to ban programming it sees as slanderous or an
incitement to violence and to punish violators.
The government is also studying the possibility of unifying
municipal and state police forces into a national police force,
wresting control from mayors and governors, many of whom are opponents of Chavez.
Chavez's drive to centralize power has stoked worries of
authoritarianism among some of his critics. Human Rights Watch
recently issued a statement expressing worries about the
independence of Venezuelan institutions such as the courts.
Although unemployment is about 15 percent, Chavez has a strong
following among the poor majority in this nation of 24 million
people after pouring revenues from the state-run oil monopoly into
health, education and food programs. Venezuela has enjoyed a
bonanza from record-high oil prices.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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