Many Venezuelans abstain from vote
Polls show most opposed to creating new legislative body
CARACAS, Venezuela Venezuelans appeared to be abstaining in massive numbers on Sunday in a show of silent protest against a vote to select a constitutional assembly giving the government virtually unlimited powers.
Associated Press journalists toured more than two dozen polling places in neighborhoods across the capital, including many traditional strongholds of the ruling socialist party in southern and western Caracas. Virtually all the polling places saw hourslong lines of thousands of people in past elections over the last two decades of socialist government.
One site, a sports and cultural complex known as the Poliedro, had several thousand people waiting about two hours to vote, many having traveled from opposition-dominated neighborhoods where polling places were closed. Of the dozens of others sites seen by the AP, two in the loyalistheavy neighborhood of El Valle had lines of approximately 200 to 400 people. All the others had at most a couple of dozen voters, and many had less than a half-dozen or were completely empty.
Opinion polls say more than 70% of the country is opposed to Sunday’s vote.
“People aren’t in agreement with this,” said Daniel Ponza, a 33-year-old drywall contractor, as he watched a few dozen people outside a polling place in El Valle. “People are dying of hunger, looking for food in the trash. And I think this is just going to make things worse.”
In opposition-dominated eastern Caracas, riot police used tear gas to stop protesters from gathering for a march on the capital’s main highway. At least three police were wounded when one of their motorcycles detonated in a powerful explosion. The cause of the explosion was not immediately clear.
After voting at dawn, President Nicolas Maduro called for international acceptance of what he called his government’s fight against a violent opposition trying to sabotage his administration.
The run-up to the vote has been marked by months of clashes between protesters and the government that have left at least 116 dead and nearly 2,000 wounded. A 61year-old nurse was fatally shot by men accused of being pro-government paramilitaries during a protest at a church a few hundred feet from the school where Maduro voted.
“We’ve stoically withstood the terrorist, criminal violence,” Maduro said. “Hopefully the world will respectfully extend its arms toward our country.”
The opposition is boycotting Sunday’s vote, contending the election has been structured to ensure Maduro’s socialist party continues to dominate. So all 5,500 candidates for the 545 seats in the constituent assembly are his supporters and the vote’s success is being measured by turnout.
The government is encouraging participation with tactics that include offering social benefits like subsidized food to the poor and threatening state workers’ jobs if they don’t vote.
“I’m here because I’m hoping for housing,” said Luisa Marquez, a 46-yearold hairdresser.
Others said they were there out of conviction that the constitutional assembly would help the government fend off what they called an international capitalist conspiracy to undermine Venezuela’s socialist system with the help of the domestic opposition.
“The crisis, the shortages of food and medicine, that isn’t the government’s fault,” said Luis Osuna, a 42-year-old private bodyguard. “Those who are attacking us to kill us with hunger and blame the government are the same enemies the government’s always had.”
Venezuela has spiraled into a devastating crisis during Maduro’s four years in power, thanks to plunging oil prices and widespread corruption and mismanagement. Inflation and homicide rates are among the world’s highest and widespread shortages of food and medicine have citizens dying of preventable illnesses and rooting through trash to feed themselves.