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Showing posts with label electoral fraud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electoral fraud. Show all posts

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Honduras Sends in Troops to Quell Violent Protests over Disputed Election

Corruption is Everywhere - Certainly in Honduras

© Moises Ayala / Reuters

Honduras has handed emergency powers to its army and police to quell the unrest and protests that have been wracking the country this week as votes are counted in a highly disputed and scrutinized election.

As of 11pm Friday, the government had suspended constitutional guarantees and imposed a curfew for the next 10 days, aimed at stemming the protests which have led to at least one death and 20 injuries, as well as widespread looting, following the election which took place last Sunday.

A supporter of presidential candidate Salvador Nasralla holds a bag with cookies next to burning
tires during a protest caused by the delayed vote count for the presidential election at Villanueva
neighborhood in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, December 1, 2017 © Edgard Garrido / Reuters

"The suspension of constitutional guarantees was approved so that the armed forces and the national police can contain this wave of violence that has engulfed the country," government official Ebal Diaz said on national television on Friday.

The protests have been ongoing over the past few days as the opposition, suspecting electoral fraud, have demanded a recount of the vote.

Police officers and the Army guard the city after the Honduras government enforced a curfew on Saturday
while still mired in chaos over a contested presidential election that has triggered looting and protests
in Tegucigalpa, Honduras December 2, 2017 © Jorge Cabrera / Reuters

On Wednesday, all parties to the election signed a document vowing to respect the final result of the ongoing vote count. However, a few hours later the electoral tribunal claimed there had been a computer glitch, which was followed by incumbent President Juan Orlando Hernandez gaining the lead over his main rival, former TV host Salvador Nasralla. 

The electoral tribunal is appointed by Congress, which is in turn controlled by Hernandez’s ruling center-right National Party, leading Nasralla to declare he would refuse to acknowledge the results unless there is a full recount in three disputed regions, amounting to over 5,000 ballot boxes.

"Here in Honduras, we are in a situation of fraud against me… I won the elections with 70 percent of the vote, with 116,000 more votes than Hernandez,” Nasralla said in a Facebook post to his supporters on Friday, teleSUR reported.

“Mathematically, it is impossible that this would change even with the 30 percent of the ballots left to count."

Though Nasralla has urged his supporters to protest peacefully, demonstrators have set up roadblocks, lit bonfires, and thrown rocks and wood at police, who have responded with tear gas and water cannons. Columns of smoke from burning tires could be seen rising above the capital, Tegucigalpa, and the Public Safety Department has reported disturbances in at least eight other cities. Schools, universities and businesses have announced they would close to avoid trouble over the weekend.

"Juan Orlando is a dictator and does not want to leave," one protester told RT’s Ruptly video agency.

Honduras has long been seen as a strategic country by the United States since the 19th and early 20th centuries, when it was a “banana republic” run by US corporations.

During the civil wars which plagued Central America in the 1980s, the country was used as a supply hub by the CIA – in cahoots with local drug traffickers – for the right-wing Contra rebels in Nicaragua. That era saw widespread extrajudicial killings and disappearances of leftists and opposition figures, and recent times have been no less turbulent. In June 2009, left-wing president Manuel Zelaya was overthrown in a coup, forced onboard a military plane and flown to nearby Costa Rica while still in his pajamas.

Honduras now suffers from widespread poverty as well as extreme levels of violence from warring street gangs and drug mafias. President Hernandez has been credited with lowering the homicide rate, though it remains one of the highest in the world, as well as boosting the economy. Backed by the United States, Hernandez is seen as an ally in the war on drugs. But he has also been accused of illegal fundraising and clinging on to power, while corruption and drug trafficking remain widespread.

His opponent, Salvador Nasralla, is a popular former TV host of Lebanese descent who has pledged to fight corruption. His Opposition Alliance Against the Dictatorship coalition includes the Liberty and Refoundation Party, or Libre, led by ex-president Manuel Zelaya. Zelaya has called for international observers to monitor the ongoing vote count to resolve the crisis.

They should have had international observers there from the beginning. Very few 3rd world leaders are willing to give up their power for the sake of fair elections.





Wednesday, April 19, 2017

After Partial Recount of Ballots, Ecuador Still has Left-Leaning Government

Lenín Moreno declared winner after Ecuador election recount
By Andrew V. Pestano  

Lenín Moreno has once again been declared the winner of Ecuador's 2017 presidential election following a
recount of nearly 1.3 million votes, the South American country's National Electoral Council said in a statement.
Photo courtesy of Lenín Moreno

UPI -- Following a recount of nearly 1.3 million presidential votes, Ecuador's National Electoral Council once again declared Lenín Moreno the winner of the election, this time by a slightly wider margin.

In the recount results, the electoral council, or CNE, said Moreno's Alianza PAIS movement received 5,062,018 votes, or 51.16 percent of the total. Moreno's competitor, Guillermo Lasso, and his CREO-SUMA political coalition received 4,833,389 votes, or 48.84 percent of the total.

"Thank you for showing us that we are an honest society," CNE President Juan Pablo Pozo Bahamonde said in a statement Tuesday. "As I said before, elections are not won with speculation. They are won with votes."

In the initial results following the April 2 election, Moreno received 5,060,424, or 51.15 percent, whereas Lasso received 4,833,828, or 48.85 percent. The CNE recounted 1,275,450 votes.

"After the recount of 1.2 million votes, it ratifies victory of Alianza PAIS. Thanks, we will not let you down! Ecuador expects peace and work," Moreno said in a statement. "It is time for agreements for major national goals. Democracy is strengthened, we look forward. The future never stops!"

Members of the opposition have been protesting for weeks after the CNE announced Moreno won, saying electoral fraud occurred.

Lasso has repeatedly rejected a partial recount, instead calling for a full recount in the election.

"This recount of the CNE, rather than making the results transparent, will reveal the accomplices of this fraudulent process," Lasso said in a statement on Tuesday.

Moreno served as leftist outgoing President Rafael Correa's vice president from 2007-13 before serving as U.N. Special Envoy on Disability and Accessibility. He became paraplegic after being shot in the back in 1998.

Lasso, a center-right former banker who had the support of other opposition parties, ran on an economic platform in which he promised to create 1 million new jobs within four years. He is a conservative who vowed to reduce government spending and taxes.


Monday, December 12, 2016

Romania Re-Elects Man Serving Suspended Sentence for Electoral Fraud

No Trump effect in Romania, but something that makes even less sense
Leftist party wins Romania's
parliamentary election
The PSD party, which was driven from power in 2015, received 46 percent of the vote, exit polls indicate.
By Ed Adamczyk

Liviu Dragnea, the leader of Romania's Social Democracy Party, speaks at party headquarters in Bucharest on Sunday. His party won 45 percent of Sunday's paliamentary vote, and announced it will seek to build a coaltion government. Photo by Robert Ghement/European Pressphoto Agency

BUCHAREST, Romania, Dec. 12 (UPI) -- Romania's Social Democratic Party announced it will form a coalition government after winning the country's parliamentary election.

The leftist party, known as PSD, received 46 percent of the vote in Sunday's election. A longtime liberal ally, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party, received 6 percent. Together they will have enough seats in the 504-person legislature to return to power after the PSD was forced from leadership in 2015 amid charges of corruption and government ineptitude.

Voters used a Bucharest nightclub fire in October 2015, in which 27 people were killed, as the focus of discontent with the government.

PSD leader Liviu Dragnea promised reforms, tax cuts and pension increases in the campaign.

"I want to assure all Romanians that everything we have presented in our economic program during this electoral campaign will be implemented by a PSD government," he said Sunday.

Polls indicate the center-right National Liberal Party finished second in Sunday's elections with 20 percent of the vote. The newly formed, anti-corruption Save Romania Union party received 9 percent of the votes, exit polls indicate.

The election was a remarkable comeback for Dragnea, who, his party hopes, will be installed as prime minister. He is currently serving a two-year suspended sentence for electoral fraud, which legally excludes him from office.

Astonishing! Is he that good a candidate or are the rest that bad?