The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Maduro faces internatio­nal censure

US threatens sanctions on oil sector after Venezuelan leader reelected in controvers­ial vote

-

CARACAS: Venezuela’s socialist leader Nicolas Maduro faced fresh internatio­nal censure on Monday after re-election in a vote foes denounced as a farce cementing autocracy in the crisis-stricken OPEC nation.

The 55-year-old successor to former president Hugo Chavez hailed his win as a victory against “imperialis­m,” but his main rival refused to recognize the result alleging irregulari­ties.

Thousands of Maduro supporters, many wearing red berets, hugged and danced outside the Miraflores presidenti­al palace as the results came in, under confetti in the yellow, blue and red colours of the Venezuelan national flag.

“The revolution is here to stay!” a jubilant Maduro told the crowd, promising to prioritize economic recovery after five years of recession in the nation of 30 million people.

“Let’s go, Nico!” his supporters chanted until after midnight during party scenes in downtown Caracas.

“We mustn’t cave to any empire, or go running to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund as Argentina did. The opposition must leave us alone to govern,” said government supporter Ingrid Sequera, 51, wearing a T-shirt with a logo of Chavez’s eyes.

Declaring Sunday’s vote a “sham,” the United States is now threatenin­g sanctions on Venezuela’s all-important oil sector, which is already reeling from falling output, a brain-drain and creaking infrastruc­ture.

The European Union and major Latin Americans repeatedly warned in advance that conditions were unfair.

Chile’s President Sebastian Pinera was scathing about Sunday’s vote.

“Venezuela’s elections do not meet minimum standards of true democracy,” he said.

“Like most major democratic nations, Chile does not recognize these elections.”

Panama’s government followed suit, quickly saying it would not recognize the result. But fellow leftist-run nations Cuba and El Salvador sent congratula­tions.

Venezuela’s mainstream opposition boycotted the vote, given that two of its most popular leaders were barred, authoritie­s had banned the coalition and various of its parties from using their names, and the election board is run by Maduro loyalists.

The government used ample state resources during the campaign and pressure was put on state workers to vote.

The election board said Maduro took 5.8 million votes, versus 1.8 million for his chief challenger Henri Falcon, a former governor who broke with the boycott to stand.

Turnout at the election was 46 per cent, it said, way down from the 80 per cent at the last presidenti­al vote in 2013.

Falcon called for a new vote, complainin­g about the government’s placing of nearly 13,000 pro-government stands called “red spots” close to polling stations nationwide.

Mainly poor Venezuelan­s were asked to scan state-issued “fatherland cards” at red tents after voting in hope of receiving a “prize” promised by Maduro.

The “fatherland cards” are required to receive benefits including food boxes and money transfers.

Maduro now faces a colossal task to turn around Venezuela’s moribund economy and offered no specifics on reforming two decades of stateled is down 99 percent over the past year and inflation is at an annual 14,000 percent, according to the National Assembly.

Furthermor­e, Venezuela’s multiple creditors are considerin­g accelerati­ng claims on unpaid foreign debt, while oil major ConocoPhil­lips has been taking aggressive action to seize state oil company PDVSA’s assets over a 2007 nationaliz­ation.

Though increasing­ly shunned in the West, Maduro can at least count on the support of major powers China and Russia, who have provided billions of dollars’ funding in recent years.

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China believed the Venezuelan government and people could handle their own affairs and that everyone should respect the choice of the Venezuelan people.

Asked if China had sent congratula­tions to Maduro, he said China would “handle this in accordance with diplomatic convention”, but did not elaborate. US Republican senator Marco Rubio, a strident critic of Maduro, urged isolation of his government and said he supported “all policy options” to return Venezuela to democracy.

US President Donald Trump has said in the past he would not rule out military action against

Venezuela.

The revolution is here to stay!

Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela president

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Maduro addresses supporters after the National Electoral Council (CNE) announced the results of the voting on election day in Venezuela in Caracas. — AFP photo Nicolas Maduro
Maduro addresses supporters after the National Electoral Council (CNE) announced the results of the voting on election day in Venezuela in Caracas. — AFP photo Nicolas Maduro

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia