Outgoing Colombian president claims Israel fixed elections after losing to right-wing candidate

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Outgoing Colombian President Gustavo Petro claimed that Israel had fixed the presidential elections that took place on Sunday in a post to X/Twitter, following his loss to right-wing candidate Abelardo De La Espriella.

“I warned that the Bautista brothers’ software was vulnerable, according to the 2018 State Council ruling, and that it should be replaced with publicly available software,” Petro wrote on X, adding that he had requested an audit of the software ahead of the elections, but that it had not been allowed.

“Well, today we have evidence of a change in the IP addresses of several servers belonging to the National Registry. This means that the software was compromised, and others entered data for polling stations and voting centers,” he said. “The only entity in the world capable of doing that is the State of Israel.”

Petro added that he plans to pass the information along to the judges as soon as possible so they can conduct “the expert audit of the electoral software that has not yet been performed” while the votes are being counted.

“I request a recount of all polling stations and a recount of all votes, along with a study of the vulnerabilities in the electoral software and the polling stations that were affected.”

Petro urged the public to remain calm so that a recount that “truly reflects the will of the people” can take place, and that “before we succumb to hatred, it is time to seek a national dialogue between the fundamental political currents that divide Colombian society in half, regardless of the actual outcome of the recount.

Who is Abelardo De La Espriella?

De La Espriella, 47, has proposed a tough crackdown on crime, an end to peace talks with armed groups, and a boost to Colombia’s oil and gas sector.

Iván Cepeda Castro, 63, a leftist competitor in the presidential race, vowed to continue Petro’s policies, and is a former rebel and the country’s first leftist president.

These policies include state pension payments for the poor, union-backed labor reforms, peace talks with armed groups that have fought the state for decades, and a moratorium on new oil projects.

De La Espriella blames Petro for the country’s economic and security woes and has vowed to lower taxes and reduce the size of the state by up to 40%, but has said he will preserve Petro’s 23% increase in the minimum wage, along with other popular social measures.

400,000 voters turned in blank ballots in protest, Cepeda contests results

Whoever wins will grapple with high public debt and a divided Congress, which could stymie reform proposals.

Some 400,000 voters turned in blank ballots, usually seen as a protest vote.

Cepeda said on Sunday that he will await a final, ballot-by-ballot check of an initial presidential vote count, saying his campaign is challenging results from some 33,000 ballot boxes.

Cepeda notched 48.7% support, data from the country’s national registry office showed, less than 1% behind right-wing lawyer Abelardo De La Espriella, who won 49.65%. The difference between the two men is equivalent to some 246,000 votes.

The head of the national registrar, Hernan Penagos, said separately that verification was beginning at a municipal level and would soon extend across the country. A final count, overseen by notaries and judges, is required by Colombian law.

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