Latest News:  

English>>World

Venezuelan president-elect says not care about U.S. reorganization

(Xinhua)

10:15, April 18, 2013

CARACAS, April 17 (Xinhua) -- Venezuela's President-elect Nicolas Maduro said Wednesday that he does not care if the United States recognizes his narrow victory in Sunday's elections.

"It's obscene the U.S. intervention in the internal affairs of Venezuela," Maduro said at a press conference at the Miraflores presidential palace, demanding U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to take his eyes off Venezuela. "Get out of here, it's enough for interventionism.

"They don't recognize anything; we don't care your recognition. We have decided to be free and we will be free and independent, with you or without you," Maduro said in response to Kerry's statement about U.S reorganization to the new Venezuelan government.

The U.S. government said on Wednesday it has not decided whether to recognize Nicolas Maduro as Venezuela's new president, reiterating a call for a recount of the presidential votes as the opposition demands.

"We think there ought to be a recount. I don't know whether it' s going to happen in the next days," Kerry said.

As acting president, Maduro won Sunday's presidential election by garnering 50.75 percent of the votes, beating opposition challenger Henrique Capriles, his close foe, by a margin of less than 2 percentage points. Capriles, citing irregularities in the polls, rejected the results and demanded a recount of all votes, a call echoed by the U.S. and the Organization of American States.

The National Electoral Council (CNE) on Monday proclaimed Maduro as the new president, prompting violent protests in the oil- rich nation, which have resulted in seven deaths and injuries of 61 others.

Washington had questioned the "speed" of CNE in proclaiming Maduro as president, despite the request for an audit by the opposition, which has challenged the results and alleged irregularities. "Obviously, if there are huge irregularities, we are going to have serious questions about the viability of that government," Kerry said. "I'm not sure that's over yet."

U.S.-Venezuela relations have strained in recent years, and the two countries have not had each other's ambassador since July 2010.

We recommend:

Funeral of Thatcher held at St. Paul's Cathedral

Chinese student hurt in Boston marathon blasts

Israel marks its Independence Day

Seven killed in Venezuelan post-election protests

The White House opens its garden to the public

The world in photos

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:MaXi、Yao Chun)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Naval taskforce training in west Pacific Ocean

  2. Chinese navy conducts live-ammunition fire drill

  3. Funeral of Thatcher at St. Paul's Cathedral

  4. Test processes of H7N9 suspected case

  5. Bear bile industry gets bitten by legal action

  6. Visiting inmates with AIDS

  7. 5th Changlong Miss Bikini Competition kicks off

  8. Gymnastics titbits: beautiful phantoms

  9. Growth but dark clouds prevail

  10. China Mobile to challenge WeChat

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Terrorism knows no boundaries
  2. Asia to pull through the high-risk period
  3. Austerity: Why a simple idea isn’t so simple after all
  4. US 'pivot' policy destabilizing Asia-Pacific region
  5. Quick Comment: 3 meanings of Boston blasts
  6. Great wisdom needed to push Sino-US ties
  7. China Q1 'sound' despite slower growth
  8. Key lessons to improve fiscal transparency
  9. Triple blasts rock Boston, triggering fears of terror
  10. Who makes the massive immigration fraud?

What’s happening in China

A father posed nude at an art studio, to raise money for his children's medical expenses

  1. Poultry farmer's hard decade from SARS to H7N9
  2. 8 children injured in S China escalator accident
  3. Bear bile industry gets bitten by legal action
  4. Beijing cabbies fear loss of business
  5. Authorities test family infected by H7N9