Venezuela's government said Friday that it would order former opposition candidate Edmundo González to provide sworn testimony in an investigation into what it considers attempts to spread panic in the South American country by contesting the results of last month's presidential election.
It's the latest attempt by Nicolas Maduro's government to crack down on opponents who contend they handily defeated the self-declared socialist leader.
Maduro has refused to recognize defeat and says he won the July 28 election by more than 1 million votes, even though tally sheets by González's campaign show the president lost by a more than 2-to-1 margin. The U.S., United Nations and others said the vote lacked credibility, and even some of Maduro's leftist allies in Latin America have called on him to publish the voting records.
Venezuela's Attorney General Tarek William Saab at a news conference Friday accused the former candidate of trying to “illegally usurp responsibilities that belong exclusively” to the National Electoral Council.
González went into hiding after the July 28 vote as security forces have rounded up more than 2,000 demonstrators and political activists for challenging the official results. He's been joined underground by opposition leader María Corina Machado, who picked González as a last minute stand-in after her own candidacy was disqualified.
Ruling-party stalwarts have called for González and Machado to be arrested, but so far authorities have held off.
The Biden administration condemned a ruling Friday by Venezuela's Supreme Court certifying Maduro's win. The high court said Thursday that it had performed an audit of the results and found they matched the results announced by electoral authorities, adding that tally sheets published online by the opposition were forged.
“This ruling lacks all credibility, given the overwhelming evidence that González received the most votes on July 28,” U.S. State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel said. "Continued attempts to fraudulently claim victory for Maduro will only exacerbate the ongoing crisis."
Thanks to a superb ground game on election day, opposition volunteers collected copies of voting tallies from 80% of the 30,000 polling booths nationwide. The tally sheets printed by each voting machine carry a QR code that makes it easy for anyone to verify the results and are almost impossible to replicate.
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called Friday for Venezuela to act in a transparent manner and expressed concern about human rights violations.
Meanwhile, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, whose government is leading an attempt with Brazil and Colombia to resolve the dispute, said Friday that he would withhold recognizing Maduro as the winner until a breakdown of results was published.