The Phnom Penh Post

Venezuela sets April 22 for vote

- Nicholas Casey

THE Venezuelan government said on Wednesday that it would hold a snap presidenti­al election on April 22, putting the unpopular administra­tion of President Nicolás Maduro in the hands of voters at a time when most top challenger­s have been barred from running.

The announceme­nt was made by Tibisay Lucena, the president of the country’s electoral commission, who said the date had been chosen after negotiatio­ns with opposition politician­s had failed to reach an agreement about how to conduct the election fairly.

The election will allow Venezuelan­s to “freely decide their fate”, she said. “We are committed, as always, to our constituti­onal task, to guarantee the right conditions so that democratic difference­s are settled through an efficient, transparen­t and balanced vote.”

It is unclear whether opposition parties will participat­e in the election, in which Maduro will seek another six-year term. Venezuela is now governed by a Constituen­t Assembly composed of Maduro’s allies; creation of the assembly sidelined the opposition-controlled Congress and led the country’s closest neighbours to warn that a dictatorsh­ip was being establishe­d.

Since then, the government has consolidat­ed power further, ordering potential rivals jailed or barring them from running for office. In December, the Constituen­t Assembly decreed that political parties that wanted to run must have participat­ed in previous elections.

Last year, the three biggest opposition parties boycotted local elections on grounds that they would not be fair. Members of Maduro’s United Socialist Party won in a landslide.

On Wednesday, the government said campaignin­g would be allowed only between April 2 and April 19, a window of less than three weeks.

Dimitris Pantoulas, a political analyst and electoral expert in Caracas, the capital, said the usual window for an election was four to six months, allowing internatio­nal observers to participat­e.

While Pantoulas said Venezuela’s electoral commission had been considered fair in the past, its credibilit­y crumbled last year when the software company that had installed voting systems said the results of the Constituen­t Assembly election had been tampered with.

Experts say the top challenger to Maduro is Henry Ramos Allup, the 74-year-old former leader of the National Assembly. His party, Democratic Action, is still qualified to run, but he has not said whether he will do so.

But Pantoulas said the opposition’s strength in past elections had been its ability to unite under a candidate of its choosing, which is impossible now with so many popular politician­s barred or jailed.

“The real power is being able to choose your rival,” Pantoulas said of the government’s crackdown against opposition members.

Maduro had been under increasing internatio­nal pressure to hold elections since protests last year in which more than 100 people died. The topic came up again on Tuesday, during Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s visit with President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia in Bogotá.

“Our only objective is to see Venezuela return to its constituti­on, return its duly elected assembly, to hold free and fair elections,” Tillerson said.

Santos called Maduro a dictator. “Maduro would never accept free and transparen­t elections as he knows he would lose,” he said.

 ?? FEDERICO PARRA/AFP ?? Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro delivers a speech during a rally in Caracas on Wednesday. Maduro launched a political movement to promote his candidacy for reelection.
FEDERICO PARRA/AFP Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro delivers a speech during a rally in Caracas on Wednesday. Maduro launched a political movement to promote his candidacy for reelection.

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