Chief Editor
10-07-2006, 08:47 AM
Mexico rally challenges poll results
MEXICO CITY: More than 100,000 protesters have filled a Mexico City square to back Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in his fight to overturn a tight presidential election he says was rigged against him. To cheers, whistles and shouts of “Fraud, fraud”, Lopez Obrador told the crowd that the official razor-thin election victory of the conservative ruling party’s Felipe Calderon last Sunday was bogus.
He said he was the legitimate winner and called for more protest marches as his legal team challenges the results before Mexico’s highest election court. Some of the 130,000 people who came out in support of the popular former mayor of Mexico City held posters reading “No to the damn fraud”, accused the ruling party of vote-rigging and some warned of unrest. “If there’s no solution, there’ll be a revolution,” they chanted.
Lopez Obrador will challenge the result in the electoral court, but Calderon is looking presidential after a recount of vote tally sheets showed he won by less than 1 percentage point. Lopez Obrador has yet to produce evidence of fraud, and a team of European Union observers has said there was no large-scale irregularity or vote-rigging.
Still, many of his followers are convinced he was robbed. “First there was one result and later on there was another. Of course there was fraud,” said Alberto Gallegos, 33, a chemical engineer. “It makes me mad.” Mexico’s left still remembers a 1988 election widely believed to have been stolen from them by the PRI.
Lopez Obrador said his protests would be peaceful, but he would not give in easily. “This is only just beginning,” he said, calling for more marches and rallies next week. The left is calling for a vote-for-vote recount, instead of a new count of polling station tally sheets as happened this past week. Mexican law does not allow for a count of every vote. The Federal Electoral Institute said officials from all parties, and citizens called at random to help out on voting day, staffed polling stations and few reported problems.
www.thenews.com.pk (http://www.thenews.com.pk)
MEXICO CITY: More than 100,000 protesters have filled a Mexico City square to back Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in his fight to overturn a tight presidential election he says was rigged against him. To cheers, whistles and shouts of “Fraud, fraud”, Lopez Obrador told the crowd that the official razor-thin election victory of the conservative ruling party’s Felipe Calderon last Sunday was bogus.
He said he was the legitimate winner and called for more protest marches as his legal team challenges the results before Mexico’s highest election court. Some of the 130,000 people who came out in support of the popular former mayor of Mexico City held posters reading “No to the damn fraud”, accused the ruling party of vote-rigging and some warned of unrest. “If there’s no solution, there’ll be a revolution,” they chanted.
Lopez Obrador will challenge the result in the electoral court, but Calderon is looking presidential after a recount of vote tally sheets showed he won by less than 1 percentage point. Lopez Obrador has yet to produce evidence of fraud, and a team of European Union observers has said there was no large-scale irregularity or vote-rigging.
Still, many of his followers are convinced he was robbed. “First there was one result and later on there was another. Of course there was fraud,” said Alberto Gallegos, 33, a chemical engineer. “It makes me mad.” Mexico’s left still remembers a 1988 election widely believed to have been stolen from them by the PRI.
Lopez Obrador said his protests would be peaceful, but he would not give in easily. “This is only just beginning,” he said, calling for more marches and rallies next week. The left is calling for a vote-for-vote recount, instead of a new count of polling station tally sheets as happened this past week. Mexican law does not allow for a count of every vote. The Federal Electoral Institute said officials from all parties, and citizens called at random to help out on voting day, staffed polling stations and few reported problems.
www.thenews.com.pk (http://www.thenews.com.pk)