Venezuela manipulated turnout figure, says election company
Difference may be around one million votes
Wednesday, 2nd August 2017
Venezuela inflated the turnout figures for its constituent assembly election by at least one million votes, the company that provides voting machines to the country has said.
The news is a blow to President Nicolas Maduro and his ruling Socialist Party, coming hours after the Reuters news agency reported that only 3.7 million people had voted by 5.30pm in Sunday's poll.
The numbers came from internal elections data – in contrast to the 8.1 million people authorities said had voted that day.
Venezuela's electoral council extended voting to 7pm, but election experts said doubling the vote in the last 90 minutes would be without precedent.
[caption id="attachment_4120" align="aligncenter" width="500"] ©REUTERS/Marco Bello[/caption]Electronic voting technology firm Smartmatic, which created the voting system used by Venezuela since 2004, said the turnout figures had been tampered with.
"We know, without any doubt, that the turnout of the recent election for a National Constituent Assembly was manipulated," said Smartmatic Chief Executive Antonio Mugica in a press briefing in London.
"We estimate the difference between the actual participation and the one announced by authorities is at least one million votes," he said.
‘Assault on democratic rule’
The opposition, which boycotted the vote, has dismissed the official tally of 8.1 million participants as fraudulent. That figure was crucial for Maduro to legitimise the election.
The opposition in July held an informal plebiscite that it said brought in more than seven million voters who overwhelmingly rejected the creation of the constituent assembly.
The assembly will have the power to dissolve the opposition-run congress and is expected to sack the country's chief prosecutor, who has harshly criticised Maduro this year.
Countries around the world have condemned the assembly, which has no legal restrictions on its powers, as an assault on democratic rule.
Critics say the assembly is meant to indefinitely extend Maduro's rule. They say he would lose a free and fair presidential election and is widely criticised for an economic crisis marked by triple-digit inflation, rising poverty levels and chronic shortages of food and medicine.
[caption id="attachment_4236" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Freddy Guevara. ©REUTERS/Marco Bello[/caption]Oil workers march
Maduro says the assembly was necessary to give the government power to end the economic crisis and bring peace to the country after four months of opposition protests, which often include violent clashes between security forces and hooded demonstrators.
More than 120 people have been killed since the unrest began in April.
Opposition leader Freddy Guevara called for a protest march tomorrow to prevent delegates to the new assembly from occupying the halls of congress, which the opposition won in a landslide victory in 2015.
The United States this week called Maduro a dictator, froze his US assets, and barred Americans from doing business with him. The European Union said it was mulling a "whole range of actions" on Venezuela.
[caption id="attachment_3137" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a gathering in support of him. ©Miraflores Palace/REUTERS[/caption]Maduro, like his predecessor and mentor, the late Hugo Chavez, regularly laughs off criticism from Washington even though the United States is Venezuela's top crude importer.
He continues to enjoy public backing from the Venezuela's military, though soldiers are increasingly weary of the popular backlash against their role in quelling protests.
Oil workers loyal to Maduro rallied in several energy producing regions of the country today.
Chanting and carrying the red Socialist Party flag, they denounced sanctions on the leftist president.
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