Chaos in Caracas: Thousands protest Maduro's election win
Tens of thousands of residents of the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, demonstrated against the official results of Sunday's presidential election, which declared Nicolas Maduro the winner for the third consecutive time. The opposition, numerous Latin American countries, and the Organization of American States (OAS) are contesting the election results.
9:43 AM EDT, July 30, 2024
According to the National Electoral Commission, Maduro secured 51.2% of the votes, while opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, representing the largest bloc of Maduro regime opponents, garnered 44.2%.
Protests in Venezuela
The Venezuelan democratic opposition claims Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, their candidate in Sunday's presidential election, secured 6.2 million votes, a clear majority.
Hundreds of demonstrators, breaking through the police blockade, rode motorcycles into the government district of Caracas, where the presidential palace is located. They chanted toward Maduro and his government: "Down with him, down with him, he must fall!"
Similar chants, alternating with shouts of "Freedom, freedom!" from a crowd of young people, echoed in Petare, an extensive district of Caracas populated by the city's poorest residents.
Street protests against what many are calling "another electoral fraud by Nicolas Maduro's government" continued throughout Monday in many other districts of the Venezuelan capital.
"Venezuelan military units are now greeting the protestors instead of stopping them Nicolás Maduro is slowly losing the loyalty of his entire military Socialism is dying," reads a post on platform X.
The police completely blocked access to the wealthiest, elite district of Las Mercedes. When police officers used tear gas, they were met with a barrage of stones.
While the government announced in an official statement Nicolas Maduro's third consecutive electoral victory, the Venezuelan Attorney General's Office announced the initiation of an investigation into an alleged "opposition plan to falsify the elections."
Meanwhile, Maria Corina Machado, the leader of the Venezuelan democratic opposition, whose pre-election polls predicted her victory and whom the Maduro regime prevented from running in the election, announced on Monday that, according to reliable data obtained by the opposition, Maduro's opponents had secured 73.2% of the vote.
There are doubts about the election results
The European Union joined the United States, Chile, Colombia, and Brazil—the first countries to express doubts about the conduct of the elections.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on the Venezuelan authorities to ensure "complete transparency" in the elections and allow citizens to "peacefully express their will." Meanwhile, Maduro's government did everything to prevent the presence of foreign observers. One of these observers was former Argentine President Alberto Fernandez.
Venezuelan Attorney General William Saab announced the day after the presidential election that the Venezuelan opposition would open an investigation into an alleged provocative plan to falsify the voting results.
Attorney General Saab stated at a press conference that on the day of the election, Venezuela suffered "an attack from North Macedonia" aimed at falsifying the voting results in fifteen thousand localities.
"They wanted to falsify the voting protocols," said the attorney general, adding that "the responsibility for this plan rests with opposition leader Maria Corina Machado and a few other opposition members of the Voluntad Popular party living in exile."
The Organization of American States (OAS), headquartered in Washington, has called an extraordinary session to address the election results in Venezuela.
The Permanent Council of the OAS was convened at the request of twelve member countries, including the United States, Canada, Guatemala, and Argentina.