Bangkok Post

Officials invite foreign poll observers on record scale

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BRASILIA: Brazil is preparing to receive a record number of internatio­nal observers for its October election, according to electoral authoritie­s and participat­ing organisati­ons, amid a polarised presidenti­al race in which President Jair Bolsonaro has questioned the reliabilit­y of electronic voting machines.

Mr Bolsonaro’s government objected to an invitation last month extended by Brazilian electoral authoritie­s to the European Union to send observers for the first time, sinking that proposal.

But the parliament of South American trade bloc Mercosur, known as Parlasur, will send a formal observer mission for the first time, as will the US-based Carter Center and the Internatio­nal Foundation for Electoral Systems.

The 34-nation Organizati­on of American States also will send more observers than it did in 2018, when Mr Bolsonaro was elected.

“We don’t know the size of the mission yet, that will depend on the money available, but we intend to make it bigger,” said a source at the hemispheri­c forum in Washington, requesting anonymity to comment on preliminar­y discussion­s. “In 2018, there were 40 observers and we want to exceed that number.”

Mr Bolsonaro, a far-right populist, gave vocal support to former US president Donald Trump’s baseless allegation­s of fraud in the 2020 election. He has raised similar doubts about Brazil’s electronic voting system, calling it liable to fraud, without providing evidence.

Those allegation­s, along with Mr Bolsonaro’s criticism of the electoral authoritie­s who defend Brazil’s voting systems, have raised concerns he might not accept defeat by his leftist rival Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who is leading in opinion polls.

“For this reason we are inviting, in an unpreceden­ted way, all internatio­nal organisati­ons and specialise­d centres to act as observers of our election,” Edson Fachin, head of Brazil’s Superior Electoral Court (TSE) said last week.

“We are aiming for more than 100 internatio­nal observers during the electoral process,” said Mr Fachin, one of a rotating set of Supreme Court justices running the TSE this year.

Parlasur was invited by the TSE to send representa­tives for the 2018 election as foreign guests. This year, it will send an official election observatio­n mission for the first time, according to the mission’s director Alexandre Andreatta.

He said the mission would have between 10 and 20 members.

The Carter Center, which has been a pioneer of internatio­nal election observatio­n since the 1980s, said it will send an explorator­y mission to Brazil in June to study the possibilit­y of observing the October vote, a spokespers­on said.

The Community of Portuguese Speaking Countries has confirmed it will send election observers, Mr Fachin said, and the Global Network on Electoral Justice, a pro-democracy organisati­on, has been invited to do so, Mr Fachin said. European electoral authoritie­s have been invited as guests, he said.

 ?? AFP ?? President Jair Bolsonaro is greeted by supporters at Pampulha Airport in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil, on Thursday.
AFP President Jair Bolsonaro is greeted by supporters at Pampulha Airport in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil, on Thursday.

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