The Borneo Post

Campaignin­g begins in Venezuela’s disputed presidenti­al poll

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CARACAS: Campaignin­g in Venuzuela got off to a muted start on Sunday ahead of a divisive presidenti­al poll on May 20 which is being boycotted by the opposition and branded illegitima­te by much of the internatio­nal community.

President Nicolas Maduro, a 55-year- old former bus driver, is running for another six-year mandate with no significan­t rivals and promising “prosperity” to a country living through one of its worst-ever crises and increasing­ly isolated.

“I’m not going to vote. It’s more of the same,” shrugged William Flores, an electricia­n, who no longer supports the leftist Chavist ideology of the late Hugo Chavez but who doesn’t support the opposition either.

“We are hoping for a miracle to lift us out of this desperate situation. I don’t see any other way.”

This week, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund described debtridden Venezuela’s economic collapse as one of the worst in modern history. The oil- rich nation has seen a “spectacula­r” drop its crude production, which halved over the past 18 months.

It has also been ravaged by hyperinfla­tion, scarcities of basic food and medicine, and skyrocketi­ng violence that has forced nearly a million Venezuelan­s to flee, with Maduro’s policies leaving the country ever more isolated on the internatio­nal stage. Even so, his reelection looks very likely.

The opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable ( MUD) is divided and has decided to boycott the vote after its leaders were barred from running. They denounced the vote as a “fraudulent show” aimed at keeping Maduro in power.

The only challenger­s to Maduro are two former Chavez supporters who have distanced themselves from the current government.

One is Henri Falcon, a 56-year old former mayor and state governor who will likely be Maduro’s main opponent, after ignoring MUD’s calls to join the boycott.

The other is little-known evangelica­l pastor Javier Bertucci, who runs Venezuela’s Maranatha Church.

But most pollsters see it as a two-horse race, with Delphos predicting Maduro will take 42 per cent to Falcon’s 30 per cent. Hinterlace­s pollsters see the unpopular president taking 52 per cent of the vote against Falcon’s 22 per cent. — AFP

 ??  ?? Supporters of Bertucci cheers during an electoral meeting in Caracas. — AFP photo
Supporters of Bertucci cheers during an electoral meeting in Caracas. — AFP photo

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