Venezuela’s leftist leader,
Nicolas Maduro, won a new six-year term on Sunday, but his main rivals
disavowed the election alleging massive irregularities in a process critics
decried as a farce propping up a dictatorship.
Victory for the 55-year-old
former bus driver, who replaced Hugo Chavez after his death from cancer in
2013, may trigger a new round of western sanctions against the socialist
government as it grapples with a ruinous economic crisis.
U.S. President Donald
Trump’s administration is threatening moves against Venezuela’s already reeling
oil sector.
Venezuela’s election board,
run by Maduro loyalists, said he took 5.8 million votes, versus 1.8 million for
his closest challenger Henri Falcon, a former governor who broke with an
opposition boycott to stand.
“They underestimated me,”
Maduro told cheering supporters on a stage outside Miraflores presidential
palace in downtown Caracas as fireworks sounded and confetti fell on the crowd.
Turnout at the election was
just 46.1 per cent, the election board said, way down from the 80 percent
registered at the last presidential vote in 2013.
The opposition said that
figure was inflated, putting participation at nearer 30 per cent.
An electoral board source
told Reuters 32.3 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots by 6 p.m. (2200 GMT)
as most polls shut.
“The process undoubtedly
lacks legitimacy and as such we do not recognise it,” said Falcon, a
56-year-old former state governor, looking downcast.
Maduro had welcomed
Falcon’s candidacy, which gave some legitimacy to a process critics at home and
around the world had condemned in advance as the “coronation” of a dictator.
Falcon’s quick rejection of
Sunday’s election, and call for a new vote, was therefore a blow to the
government’s strategy.
Falcon, a former member of
the Socialist Party who went over to the opposition in 2010, said he was
outraged at 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, which opponents said was akin
to vote-buying.
The “fatherland cards” are
required to receive benefits including food boxes and money transfers.
A third presidential
candidate, evangelical pastor Javier Bertucci, followed Falcon in slamming
irregularities during Sunday’s vote and calling for a new election.
In spite of his
unpopularity over a national economic meltdown, Maduro benefited on Sunday not
just from the opposition boycott but also from a ban on his two most popular
rivals and the liberal use of state resources in his campaign.
His tally, however, fell
short of the 10 million votes he had said throughout the campaign he wanted to
win.
Maduro, the self-described
“son” of Chavez, says he is battling an “imperialist” plot to crush socialism
and take over Venezuela’s oil.
Opponents say he has
destroyed a once-wealthy economy and ruthlessly crushed dissent.
Attendance appeared thin in
many polling stations visited by Reuters reporters, from wealthy east Caracas
to the Andean mountains near Colombia.
There were lines, however,
at poorer government strongholds, where the majority of voters interviewed said
they were backing Maduro.
“I’m hungry and don’t have
a job, but I’m sticking to Maduro,” said Carlos Rincones, 49, in the
once-thriving industrial city of Valencia, accusing right-wing business owners
of purposefully hiding food and hiking prices.
Many Venezuelans are disillusioned
and angry over the election: they criticize Maduro for economic hardships and
the opposition for its dysfunctional splits.
Reeling from a fifth year
of recession, falling oil production and U.S. sanctions, Venezuela is seeing
growing levels of malnutrition and hyperinflation, and mass emigration.
Venezuelan migrants staged
small anti-Maduro protests in cities from Madrid to Miami. In the highland city
of San Cristobal near Colombia, three cloth dolls representing widely loathed
officials – Electoral Council head Tibisay Lucena, Socialist Party No. 2
Diosdado Cabello and Vice President Tareck El Aissami – were hung from a
footbridge.
But streets were calm, with
children playing soccer on one road in San Cristobal blocked off at past
elections to accommodate long voter lines.
For many Venezuelans,
Sunday was a day to look for scant food or stock up on water, which is
increasingly running short because of years of underinvestment.
“I’m not voting – what’s
the point if we already know the result? I prefer to come here to get water
rather than waste my time,” said Raul Sanchez, filling a jug from a tap by a
busy road in the arid northwestern city of Punto Fijo because his community has
not had running water for 26 days.
With the election behind
him, Maduro may choose to deepen a purge of critics within the ruling
“Chavismo” movement.
He faces a Herculean task
to turn around the moribund economy, with the bolivar currency down 99 per cent
in the past year and inflation at an annual 14,000 per cent, according to the
National Assembly.
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