Today: October 25, 2024
August 13, 2024
2 mins read

Brazilian government will not recognize Venezuelan Supreme Court ruling

SAN LUIS POTOSÍ, Mexico.- The Brazilian government assured the regime of Nicolás Maduro that it will not accept the ruling of the Venezuelan Supreme Court that ratifies the victory of the Chavista candidate, according to government sources declared to the newspaper Clarion.

“The request for the regime to present the minutes is emphatic,” the sources commented to the aforementioned media outlet. In addition, they argued that the National Electoral Council should be the body that determines the winner of the presidential elections on July 28 based on the minutes of the scrutiny.

“We continue to demand that the minutes be presented, table by table and ballot box by ballot box, and the final word of the CNE, not the TSJ,” reported the sources, who speculated that the minutes would not be in the Court either.

“They said that Elvis Amoroso brought the minutes but clearly that does not seem to have happened. He arrived with a folder with three papers, nothing more,” they told Clarion.

The governments of Brazil, Mexico and Colombia published a joint statement in which they demanded that the National Electoral Council (CNE) present the results of the presidential elections broken down.

The representatives of the three governments allied to Maduro, “taking note of the process initiated before the Supreme Court of Justice of Venezuela (TSJ) regarding the electoral process,” reaffirmed “the convenience of allowing impartial verification of the results, respecting the fundamental principle of popular sovereignty.”

In their petition, they reiterated that the results must contain a breakdown of each table and must be published by the CNE and not by another entity.

“The CNE is the body that is legally responsible for the transparent dissemination of election results,” they said in the statement.

The governments of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (Brazil), Gustavo Petro (Colombia) and Andrés Manuel López Obrador (Mexico) have tried to act as mediators in the conflict that broke out between the Maduro regime and the opposition following the elections.

In light of this, and taking into account the links with Chavismo, the letter requests that political parties and social organizations “exercise the utmost caution and moderation in their demonstrations at public events.”

They also urged Venezuelan security forces to allow social protests to take place freely as long as no crimes are committed.

According to the Chavista regime, Maduro obtained 51.95% of the votes in the elections on Sunday, July 28, while Edmundo García only obtained 43.18%.

The opposition, which has managed to gather 81% of the voting records, currently public in a web page for review by citizens and independent bodies, states that García far surpassed Maduro by almost 40% of the votes. This result has been recognized by countries such as Argentina, the United States and Peru, among others.

Later, the president of the National Electoral Council (CNE) of Venezuela, the Chavista militant Elvis Amorosodelivered the vote counting records to the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ), another entity controlled by Nicolás Maduro, according to reported the EFE news agency.

In a ceremony broadcast by the state-run channel Venezolana de Televisión (VTV), the president of the TSJ, Caryslia Rodríguez – another figure close to Maduro – stated: “It is noted that all the documents requested by the National Electoral Council have been received, thus complying with the court order.”

Follow our channel WhatsApp. Receive the information from CubaNet on your cell phone through Telegram.

Source link

Latest Posts

They celebrated "Buenos Aires Coffee Day" with a tour of historic bars - Télam
Cum at clita latine. Tation nominavi quo id. An est possit adipiscing, error tation qualisque vel te.

Categories

Previous Story

Musicians Without Borders brings Better a Violin Than a Rifle to Mexico

Colombia prepares for the UN Executive Council Tourism
Next Story

Colombia prepares for the UN Executive Council Tourism

Latest from Blog

Go toTop