Machado says peaceful protests, external pressure could still oust President Maduro

Machado says peaceful protests, external  pressure could still oust President Maduro

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado leads a march amid the disputed presidential election, in Caracas, Venezuela, August 17, 2024.

CARACAS--Peaceful street protests and international pressure still have the potential to unseat Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, opposition leader Maria Corina Machado said on Tuesday, as an election dispute reached the one-month mark and the opposition's pathways to claim power seemed narrow.

The disagreement over the July 28 contest has sparked international cries for the release of full vote tallies, deadly protests and moves by the country's prosecutor to investigate the opposition and arrest journalists.

Machado said in an interview with Reuters that the opposition has a "robust strategy" to claim victory. She would give no details but added that she and former opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez are united.

"It is the coordination between internal and external forces which will achieve change," Machado, who has appeared at marches but otherwise been in hiding since the vote, said via video call. "What does Maduro have left today? A very reduced group of high-ranking soldiers, the control of magistrates from the (top court) and arms ... he is sowing fear."

Venezuela's national electoral authority and its top court named Maduro the election's victor, saying he won just over half of votes in the election. But tallies from about 80% of ballot boxes posted on an opposition website show a resounding victory for Gonzalez, giving him 67% support. Some Western countries, nearly all democracies in the Americas and international bodies such as a United Nations panel of experts have called for the release of full vote tallies, with some alleging outright fraud by the ruling party.

The electoral council has not yet posted detailed tallies, saying a cyberattack on election day affected its systems. Asked if Maduro, who has said Machado and Gonzalez should be jailed for stoking violence at protests, could remain in power on the back of military control, Machado said "no, absolutely not."

Hours after Machado spoke to Reuters, she posted on social media that "the regime of Nicolas Maduro has kidnapped" Perkins Rocha, a lawyer for her Vente Venezuela movement and her personal friend. "We keep moving forward, for Perkins, for all those jailed and persecuted and for all of Venezuela," Machado said on X.

The interview came the same day that Gonzalez ignored, for a second time, a summons to appear at the attorney general's office to testify about the opposition website. Gonzalez, a 74-year-old former diplomat, ignored his first summons on Monday and an arrest warrant could be issued for him if he ignores a third.

The Daily Herald

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