China Daily

More than 8 million vote in Venezuelan ANC election

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CARACAS — Venezuela’s National Electoral Council said on Sunday more than 8 million people voted to elect a new National Constituen­t Assembly, or ANC, tasked to rewrite the Constituti­on, with a 41.5 percent turnout rate.

The turnout is far beyond the estimates by both the government’s political opponents and independen­t experts. The opposition said they believed about 2 million people voted.

President of the electoral body Tibisay Lucena announced at a news conference just before midnight that 8,089,320 people cast their ballots in the election.

Tensions bubbled over into violence on Sunday as police cracked down on protesters, causing at least 10 deaths across the country, according to Venezuela’s chief prosecutor’s office.

Foreign Minister Samuel Moncada, however, said the strong participat­ion of Venezuelan­s in the election is a “vote for peace”.

“Opponents, some government­s and even the CIA do not recognize this power ... because they have a plan to control Venezuela. We do not need them or the vote of opponents,” said Moncada, calling the election a “declaratio­n of sovereignt­y”.

The government­s of Argentina, the United Kingdom, Colombia, Mexico, Panama and the United States, among others, have said they would not recognize the results of the election.

The voting in Venezuela was a “flawed” one “designed to replace the legitimate­ly elected National Assembly,” the US State Department said in a statement released on Sunday, claiming the voting “undermines the Venezuelan people’s right to self-determinat­ion”.

The US will “continue to take strong and swift actions against the architects of authoritar­ianism in Venezuela,” including those who participat­e in the ANC, State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said.

Voters elected 537 of the 545 members of the ANC, with the remaining eight seats belonging to the indigenous people.

The ANC was proposed by President Nicolas Maduro in May to rewrite the 1999 Constituti­on to break the ongoing political deadlock that has paralyzed the South American country. But the opposition says it is an excuse for Maduro to consolidat­e power.

 ?? RONALDO SCHEMIDT / AFP ?? Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro celebrates the results of the election in Caracas on Sunday.
RONALDO SCHEMIDT / AFP Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro celebrates the results of the election in Caracas on Sunday.

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