CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela’s former opposition candidate, Edmundo González, on Wednesday mentioned he was coerced into signing a letter successfully recognizing his defeat in July’s presidential election, which electoral authorities declare was received by President Nicolás Maduro.
The revelation of the letter is the newest pressure to the nation’s political disaster, which was exacerbated by the disputed election outcomes and González current departure for exile in Spain. González and the Unitary Platform coalition he represented on July 28 declare they defeated Maduro by a large margin.
The doc states it was meant to be confidential, however Jorge Rodríguez, head of the Nationwide Meeting and Maduro’s chief negotiator, offered it throughout a nationally televised press convention hours after an area information outlet revealed elements of it. The letter exhibits González because the sender and is addressed to Rodriguez, who signed it as recipient.
Rodríguez informed reporters González signed the letter of his personal volition. González, nevertheless, in a video posted on social media mentioned he signed it below coercion.
“They confirmed up with a doc that I must signal to permit my departure from the nation,” González mentioned. “In different phrases, both I signed or I’d face penalties. There have been very tense hours of coercion, blackmail and strain.”
Rodríguez, questioned about González video message, threatened to disclose audio of his conversations with González if he didn’t take again his assertions.
Venezuela’s Nationwide Electoral Council, which is stacked with Maduro loyalists, declared Maduro the election winner hours after polls closed. In contrast to earlier presidential elections, electoral authorities didn’t present detailed vote counts.
However the opposition coalition collected tally sheets from 80% of the nation’s digital voting machines and posted them on-line. González and opposition chief Maria Corina Machado mentioned the voting data confirmed the previous diplomat received the election with twice as many votes as Maduro.
González grew to become the topic of an arrest warrant over an investigation into the publishing of the tally sheets.
World condemnation over the dearth of transparency prompted Maduro to ask Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal of Justice, whose members are aligned with the ruling get together, to audit the outcomes. The excessive courtroom reaffirmed his victory.
González, Machado, different opposition leaders and international governments questioned the audit’s outcomes. Nonetheless, within the letter made public Wednesday, González admitted that whereas he doesn’t agree with the tribunal’s ruling, “I abide by it as a result of it’s a decision of the best courtroom of the Republic.”
In distinction, in his video message, he referred to as himself the “elected president of thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of Venezuelans” and promised to “fulfill” their mandate.
Venezuela’s subsequent presidential time period begins Jan. 10 and lasts six years.