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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Photo via Voice of America Journal
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Published on Wednesday, July 31, 2024
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
and wire
services
On
Tuesday, Costa Rica's Minister of Foreign
Affairs offered Venezuelan opposition
leaders Maria Corina Machado and Edmundo
Gonzalez political asylum or refugee
status.
"We
have been
informed of
arrest warrants against Maria Corina
Machado and Edmundo Gonzalez," Minister
Arnoldo André-Tinoco said. "The
country is
prepared to
grant asylum and refuge to them and all
other politically persecuted people in
Venezuela, especially those who are
refugees in the Argentine embassy in
Caracas."
Machado
thanked Costa Rica for their generosity
but reiterated her decision to stay in
Venezuela instead.
"I
appreciate the generous hospitality of the
Costa Rican government in reaction to the
brutal repression of the Maduro regime
against citizens who defend the results of
the presidential election on July 28,"
said Machado in her statement.
"Our
priority is the protection of our fellow
asylum seekers at the Argentine Embassy. My
responsibility is to continue this fight
alongside the people.
From
Venezuela, thanks to the beloved people
and government of Costa Rica, " she added.
Costa
Rica's presidency has rejected the
results, proclaiming Maduro's win and
calling them fraudulent.
María
Corina Machado-Parisca (56) is a
Venezuelan opposition leader who supports
Edmundo González-Urrutia (74), the
presidential candidate of the Unitary
Platform political alliance for the 2024
Venezuelan presidential election.
According to a report
published by Voice of America Journal, as
unrest grows across Venezuela over Sunday’s
presidential election, the U.S.-based Carter
Center says the disputed vote that ended
with President Nicolas Maduro being declared
the winner “cannot be considered
democratic.” The non-governmental organization
founded by former President Jimmy Carter and
his late wife, Rosalynn, deployed a team of
17 election experts to the South American
country to observe the vote. In a statement
issued late Tuesday, the center said the
vote “did not meet international standards
of electoral integrity.” Venezuela’s electoral council,
which is controlled by Maduro, announced
early Monday that the president had won the
election with 51% of the vote compared to
44% for challenger Edmundo González. The
council’s results widely contradicted exit
polling of voters that showed González
winning by a large margin. The results did not include vote
tallies from individual polling centers,
which election watchdogs said was critical
for determining the accuracy of the vote
count. The Carter Center said it could not
verify or corroborate the announced results,
adding that the electoral council’s failure
to reveal the vote totals “constitutes a
serious breach of electoral principles.” The statement also criticized the
council for taking actions that demonstrated
“a clear bias” towards Maduro. Among the
issues pointed out by the Carter Center
included making it difficult for Venezuelans
at home and abroad to register to vote,
interfering with registrations of parties
and candidates, and frequent attempts by
authorities to restrict the opposition’s
campaign activities, including “harassment
or intimidation” of people providing goods
and services to the main opposition
campaign.
Hours after Maduro was declared
the winner, González and opposition leader
Maria Corina Machado told reporters they had
obtained more than 70% of tally sheets from
the voting showing Gonzalez winning more
than 6 million votes, with Maduro winning
just over 2 million votes.
The announcement of Maduro’s
victory immediately triggered angry protests
in the capital, Caracas, and across
Venezuela that have turned violent and
deadly. The Venezuelan-based human rights
group Foro Penal says at least 16 people
have been killed in the protests, which has
resulted in the toppling of at least one
statue of the late socialist leader Hugo
Chavez, Maduro’s predecessor and mentor.
The defense ministry says at least
one soldier has been killed and 48 other
security officers have been injured since
the protests broke out. Attorney General
Tarek William Saab said at least 750 people
have been arrested and are facing charges of
terrorism and other crimes.
Saab issued arrest warrants on
Tuesday for González and Machado, whom he
has accused of attacking the electoral
system without offering any evidence. The
opposition party Voluntad Popular said
Tuesday that leader Freddy Superlano had
been taken away by armed masked men.
Maduro and a key ally, National
Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez, on
Tuesday called for the arrests of both
González and Machado, who was prevented from
running for office after a ruling by
Venezuela’s Supreme Court. Rodriguez accused
González of leading a “fascist conspiracy.”
The president also challenged González to a
face-to-face confrontation during a speech
from the balcony of the presidential palace
Miraflores.
Machado and González ignored the
threats from Maduro and Rodriguez as they
held a rally in Caracas outside the United
Nations mission attended by thousands of
supporters, many of them from working-class
neighborhoods that have been electoral
strongholds of Chavez and Maduro.
The results have been greeted with
skepticism from several of Venezuela’s
neighbors. Costa Rica’s foreign ministry has
offered political asylum to both Machado and
González, as well as six members of the
opposition who have sought shelter at the
Argentinian embassy. The two nations joined
Ecuador, Guatemala, Panama, Paraguay, Peru,
the Dominican Republic and Uruguay in a
joint statement Monday calling for a
transparent count of the vote.
Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan
Gil responded by recalling the country’s
diplomats from Argentina, Costa Rica, the
Dominican Republic, Panama and Peru and
Uruguay, as well as Chile.
Agence France Presse says the
Maduro government has cut diplomatic ties
with Peru after Lima recognized González as
Venezuela’s president-elect.
The White House issued a statement
Tuesday saying U.S. President Joe Biden
spoke with Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio
Lula da Silva to discuss the situation in
Venezuela. The statement said Biden and Lula
“agreed on the need for the immediate
release of full, transparent, and detailed
voting data,” and that the election
“represents a critical moment for democracy
in the hemisphere.”
The Organization of American
States will hold an urgent meeting Wednesday
in Washington D.C. to discuss the situation.
Maduro’s victory has been recognized by Bolivia, China, Cuba, Honduras, Iran, Nicaragua and Russia.
Voice
of America Journal, VOA, is a U.S.
government news agency funded by the
U.S. Congress.
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