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Venezuela turnout '41.5%' after violent vote for constituent assembly

By Justice Kofi Bimpeh
Opposition protesters blocked streets in Caracas with barricades
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Turnout in Venezuela's controversial election for a constituent assembly was 41.5%, the electoral commission says.

Just over eight million people voted, commission president Tibisay Lucena told a news conference.
Sunday's election was marred by violence, with widespread protests and at least 10 people killed.
The opposition put the turnout at only 12%. It has refused to recognise the election and has called for further protests on Monday.


President Nicolás Maduro hailed the election as the "biggest ever vote for the revolution".
Venezuela's new constituent assembly will have powers to rewrite the constitution and override the opposition-controlled congress.


Mr Maduro says it is the only way to restore peace after months of protests and political stalemate. But his critics describe it as a power grab.
Despite the violence, Ms Lucena described the election as "a success" and the turnout as "extraordinary".

Venezuela faces mounting international criticism over the new assembly and on Sunday the US said it was considering fresh sanctions targeting the oil industry there. It has already imposed sanctions on 13 members of Mr Maduro's government.


The US State Department said it would take swift action against what it called the "architects of authoritarianism".
US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, dismissed the vote as a "sham election" and a "step towards dictatorship".
Venezuela has already been suspended from regional economic bloc Mercosur by fellow-members Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, following concern over human rights.
It has said it will withdraw from the Organisation of American States (OAS) after members including the US, Canada and Mexico said they would not recognise the authority of the constituent assembly.

The opposition called for further protests on Monday and a mass protest in Caracas on Wednesday when the new assembly is due to convene for the first time.
"We do not recognise this fraudulent process," said opposition leader Henrique Capriles. He described Sunday's deaths as a "massacre".


The BBC's Will Grant in Caracas says that although President Maduro claims a resounding victory in the election, the challenge will be governing afterwards in Venezuela's conflicted political environment.
As voting got under way on Sunday, anti-government protesters took to the streets despite a government ban.
At least three people were reported shot dead in the western state of Tachira - two teenagers and a soldier from the national guard.


A youth secretary with the opposition Acción Democrática party was shot dead during a protest in the north-eastern town of Cumana while a 39-year-old lawyer standing in the election was also reportedly killed in his home in Bolivar state.
In the capital Caracas, an explosion near one demonstration injured several police officers and set a number of their motorcycles on fire.
Security forces used armoured vehicles to dispel protesters in the Caracas district of El Paraíso.

Why did the election happen?

 President Maduro wanted to form a new constituent assembly that will have the specific purpose of drafting or adopting a new constitution
 He said the new assembly would promote "reconciliation and peace", but did not give details of exactly how rewriting the constitution would achieve such broad aims
 He also said that the constituent assembly would promote dialogue in the polarised country
 The opposition says it is a way for President Maduro to maximise his power and cling on to it for longer, as well as delay future elections
 Some loyalists of late President Hugo Chávez are also unhappy, as they treasure the old constitution drafted in 1999

BBC

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