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Showing Original Post only (View all)Protests, Disturbances, and Violence Continue in Venezuela, General Strike a “Failure” [View all]
Protests, Disturbances, and Violence Continue in Venezuela, General Strike a Failure
By Tamara Pearson
Merida, April 16th 2013 (Venezuelanalysis.com) This afternoon president Maduro said the oppositions call for a general strike today had failed. He also blamed the losing candidate in Sundays elections, Henrique Capriles, for the seven deaths last night.
Maduro said last nights violence was part of a plan to take Venezuela off the road of democracy, and called on the people to be peaceful and not fall for provocations.
He also declared the coup détat defeated, and inaugurated a health centre in Miranda state. However he said it seemed the destabilisations will continue. Though there has been no direct attempt to overthrow the government, some government authorities have referred to the oppositions refusal to recognise the election results as a coup or part of an attempt to bring about a coup.
President of the National Electoral Council (CNE) Tibisay Lucena said yesterday that the electoral system functioned perfectly on Sunday. She urged Henrique Capriles, who has not recognised the results, to use legal methods to present his complaints. 54% of the votes were audited on Sunday in the presence of booth witnesses from both political parties, and no problems were found, but opposition protestors are demanding that 100% of the votes be recounted.
Telesur reports that according to CNE norms, the opposition have twenty (working) days to contest the results, they can do it through the Supreme Court, or the CNE, but they should formalise it, and not do it through the media.
Majority is majority, and should be respected under a democracy, they shouldnt seek ambushes and invent things in order to make popular sovereignty vulnerable... that has just one name, coup-ism (golpismo), Maduro said yesterday.
Mondays aggressions
Last night seven people were killed as a result of opposition violence; two in Caracas, three in Ojeda, Zulia, one in Cumana, and one person in San Cristobal.
The opposition set fire to 18 Central Diagnostic Centres (CDIs part of the Barrio Adentro mission), and 3 subsidised markets (Mercals). They also attacked the director of the CNE, Tibisay Lucenas house, and the Telesur and VTV offices.
There are also unconfirmed reports of four attacks on housing mission buildings in Miranda, with seven people killed and ten injured.
The governor of Carabobo state, Francisco Ameliach, reported that 8 CDIs were besieged and Cuban doctors were attacked in his state. He said 64 people were detained inside the CDI, and should go to jail, because were not going to tolerate a coup détat here.
In Merida, around 700 mostly young opposition students protested outside the CNE, as well as in four other places in the city. Venezuelanalysis.com observed that police presence was light, and most police unarmed. Many of the students armed themselves with rocks and glass bottles however, as though hoping something would happen. There were similar such protests outside most of the countrys main CNE headquarters.
Many people have posted photos around social networks, claiming they are of the CNE disposing of Sundays ballot boxes, though they are in fact of the CNE disposing of 2010 voting boxes, as the law requires. Media like La Patilla and RCTV have also used the photos. Pundit Nelson Bocaranda also tweeted that the CDI in La Paz, Gallo Verde, Maracaibo is hiding some electoral boxes and the Cubans there wont allow them to be removed. Opposition television station Globovision has been arguing that if they dont want to count the votes, they must have something to hide.
Capriles called for marches around the country to each states head CNE office for today, and for a large march lead by him tomorrow to the headquarters of the CNE in Caracas.
President of the National Assembly, Diosdado Cabello, reported by Twitter that he will propose an investigation to the assembly against Capriles for the acts of violence. Luisa Ortega said the public prosecutors office will investigate the seven confirmed deaths.
Further, the suspension of the right to carry arms in place during the election, as is the custom, has been extended to this Saturday 6.00pm, following last nights violence.
State, municipal, and national police are also confined to barracks until Saturday. Police need permission from the National Bolivarian Armed Forces strategic operational command to intervene or act on any of the violence taking place.
Published on Apr 16th 2013 at 2.20pm
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