The Standard (St. Catharines)

Venezuelan crisis grows

Election company says manipulati­on ‘without any doubt’ in Venezuela vote turnout

- FABIOLA SANCHEZ and CHRISTINE ARMARIO

CARACAS, Venezuela — The official count of Venezuelan­s who participat­ed in the election of an all-powerful constituen­t assembly was tampered with — off by at least 1 million votes — the head of a voting technology company asserted Wednesday, a finding certain to sow further discord over the superbody that has generated months of nationwide protests.

Smartmatic CEO Antonio Mugica said results recorded by his systems and those reported by Venezuela’s National Electoral Council indicate “without any doubt” that the official turnout figure of more than 8 million voters was manipulate­d.

The internatio­nal software company has provided electronic machines in Venezuela since 2004.

“Even in moments of deep political conflict and division we have been satisfied with the voting process and the count has been completely accurate,” Mugica told reporters in London. “It is, therefore, with the deepest regret that we have to report that the turnout figures on Sunday, 30 July, for the constituen­t assembly in Venezuela were tampered with.”

Mugica did not specify if his company’s figures showed 1 million more — or 1 million fewer — voters participat­ed in the election.

The assembly will be granted vast powers to rewrite the nation’s constituti­on and override every branch of the government. Opposition members boycotted the election, claiming the terms to select delegates were heavily rigged to favour the ruling party. President Nicolas Maduro has vowed to use the assembly to target his enemies and solidify Venezuela as a socialist state.

Maduro says the body will help end the violence and protests that have engulfed the country since March, with at least 125 reported dead and some 2,000 wounded.

Despite the unrest and plummeting popularity ratings, Maduro appears to have maintained the full support of the country’s most important institutio­ns, notably the armed forces. Top military figures have been given special status and are scattered throughout the government. They also are in charge of strategic areas such as food distributi­on in which Venezuelan­s say bribery is widespread.

An independen­t exit poll concluded Sunday’s turnout was less than half that reported by the election commission. Opposition leaders who stationed observers in every municipali­ty also questioned the count.

Julio Borges, the president of the opposition-controlled National Assembly, said lawmakers will ask the nation’s chief prosecutor to investigat­e commission members for potential crimes.

“They want to give total power to an assembly who people with more than 10 years managing the electoral process in Venezuela say with all certainty, irreversib­ly, with hard data from their own servers, that the announced result was crooked,” Borges said.

The assembly is expected to be sworn into office Thursday. Opposition leaders are calling on Venezuelan­s to gather in Caracas for a mass protest.

Despite widespread internatio­nal condemnati­on, Maduro has appeared undeterred in his plans to seat the constituen­t assembly this week. He has threatened to use the assembly’s virtually unlimited powers to go after his opponents — and the jailing of two prominent opposition leaders Tuesday appeared to show he is willing to proceed with full force.

Leopoldo Lopez and Antonio Ledezma were dragged from their homes by heavily armed security agents and thrown into a military prison. The nation’s Supreme Court is accusing them violating the terms of their house arrest by plotting to escape and releasing video statements criticizin­g Maduro.

Both men’s supporters denied the charges and vowed to continue to try to push the ruling socialist party from power. However, they gave little indication of how they planned to do that, and the capital was unusually quiet after months of sometimes violent protests.

Smartmatic, which supplies services across the world, was founded by Venezuelan­s and began providing voting technology during the presidency of the late Hugo Chavez. In the past, opposition members have questioned the validity of results, but the firm has consistent­ly maintained its impartiali­ty.

Mugica said the company’s automated election system is designed to make evident when results are manipulate­d, but requires auditors to be monitoring.

“It is important to point out that this would not have occurred if the auditors of all political parties had been present at every stage of the election,” he said.

Luis Emilio Rondon, one of five members on the electoral commission and the only one who has sided with the opposition in the past, said after the election that he had grave doubts about the accuracy of the vote count, in part because the commission had ordered fewer audits than in previous elections. He said it did not use permanent ink to mark voters’ fingers to ensure no one votes twice.

In a series of Tweets on Wednesday, Rondon called on the commission to publish vote counts from all the nation’s polling sites and for Smartmatic to provide an audit. The commission has provided a total vote count and lists of individual winners but no details on how many votes each person received, or how many votes were cast in each region, as it has in previous elections.

Maduro called the vote for the constituti­onal assembly in May after weeks of protests fed by anger at his government over food shortages, triple-digit inflation and high crime. Many people accuse the ruling party of corruption and mismanagem­ent.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP ?? Anti-government lawmakers shout “fraud,” during a session of Venezuela’s National Assembly on Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela. The National assembly’s claim of a fraudulent election was bolstered when the CEO of the voting technology company Smartmatic...
ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP Anti-government lawmakers shout “fraud,” during a session of Venezuela’s National Assembly on Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela. The National assembly’s claim of a fraudulent election was bolstered when the CEO of the voting technology company Smartmatic...

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