Hugo Chavez's handpicked
successor was sworn in as Venezuela's president on Friday.
Nicolas Maduro's inauguration
ceremony took a dramatic turn at one point as a man in a red jacket rushed
toward the podium in Venezuela's National Assembly.
"They could have shot me
right here. Security has failed," Maduro said after the man was taken
away.
Maduro was quick to regain the
floor and spoke for more than two hours, vowing to crack down on any coup
attempts to remove him from the presidency and slamming political opponents for
waging what he called a "dirty election campaign" against him.
Maduro's inauguration comes a
day after Venezuela's National Electoral Council said it would complete 100%
audit of votes cast in Sunday's election "to preserve a climate of harmony
between Venezuelans."
Maduro secured 50.8% of votes in
the election while opposition candidate Henrique Capriles Radonski won 49%,
election officials said earlier this week.
Capriles had called for a
vote-by-vote recount but said late Thursday that he accepted the decision by
election officials to audit the tally.
The narrow margin has sparked
mounting tensions in Venezuela after the closely watched election to pick
Chavez's successor.
Venezuela's state-run AVN news
agency said at least eight people have been killed in post-election violence
across the country.
The government news agency tied
the deaths to opposition protests and said the victims were all followers of
Maduro.
CNN could not independently
confirm government reports of violence and it was unknown whether there were
any opposition injuries or fatalities.
Opposition protesters have sent
numerous accounts to CNN's iReport, criticizing the government and pushing for
a recount.
In one of his last public
appearances before his March 5 death, Chavez said he wanted Maduro to be his
successor.
Maduro now describes himself as
"Chavez's son" and has vowed to continue the late leader's plans to
build "21st century socialism."
On Thursday night, Capriles
urged supporters not to be discouraged by Friday's inauguration and to stay at
home and listen to salsa music.
"This fight has not
finished. ... I am sure that sooner rather than later the truth will come
out," he said.
Sources :
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/04/19/world/americas/venezuela-inauguration/index.html?hpt=ila_c1
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