When it comes to Venezuela, we’ve been down this road before.
The general election of 2018 that saw Nicolas Maduro return to the helm was deemed rigged and was rejected by global superpowers, who declared that then-Opposition leader Juan Guaido was the recognised leader of the South American state.
Here we are again, with another election returning Maduro and his government, followed by a wave of scepticism over whether the elections were fair and democratic.
As it stands today, those criticising the Maduro regime have provided no evidence to support claims the election results are false, just as Maduro’s government has provided no satisfactory proof it won fairly and squarely.
Scepticism over Venezuela’s election results is often fuelled by a recognition that Maduro embraces a more socialist political culture that is frowned upon by leading democracies, giving rise to a view that everything his regime does is nefarious and dictatorial.
However, the notion of “innocent until proven guilty” must apply to all, which leads us to the juncture of where the burden of proof in determining the truthful outcome of Sunday’s polls should lie.
The United States has already made its position known, calling on Venezuela to release the results from each precinct.
Guyana, still in dispute with Venezuela over the Essequibo region, has followed a similar path, with the government yesterday issuing a statement calling for the Venezuelan authorities to release verifiable information that Maduro won.
These calls, which place the burden of proof on Venezuela, are not unjustified, given that it was Maduro himself who signed a pact for fair elections last year.
That pact, known as the Barbados Accord, came in Bridgetown on October 17, when Maduro and some Venezuelan opposition parties agreed to pursue electoral reforms ahead of last Sunday’s polls.
The level of positive expectation generated at that meeting resulted in an easing of US sanctions introduced in 2019 that have had significant economic impact on the Bolivarian state.
At the time of the signing, it was hoped that if talks between the Maduro regime and Opposition had progressed smoothly and the election reform was undertaken as promised, then the US, European Union and Latin American governments could recognise the results, leading to a further easing of sanctions.
But the progress made soon after the talks was reversed in March this year, when the Maduro administration detained two members of the leading opposition candidate’s campaign team and issued warrants for seven others, an act the US viewed as undermining the democratic process.
In that light, it is for the Maduro regime to validate the election results and remove all doubt the process was flawed or undemocratic. Allowing for independent scrutiny and verification of the results is the best way of doing so.
In the meantime, we await word from Caricom and our Government on their positions regarding the election results.
St Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonzalves’ call for Caricom to accept Sunday’s outcome and recognise Maduro, is therefore premature and certainly does not coincide with the view of Guyana, whose president Dr Irfaan Ali is the current Caricom chairman.
T&T’s position is also important due to our close ties with Venezuela, made stronger by negotiations on Dragon Gas and, more recently, the Manakin-Cocuina agreements.
We are eager, therefore, to hear Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley’s views on the Caracas results.