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Vice President of Bolivian Electoral Tribunal Resigns Amid Vote Count Controversy - Letter

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Vice President of Bolivia’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal, Antonio Costas, is resigning amid controversies over the results of the presidential election.
Sputnik
According to Costas’s resignation letter, submitted on Tuesday, the "decision to resign from office is due to the following reason: ‘The unreasonable decision of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal to suspend the publication of the results of the Electoral Preliminary Results Transmission System – TREP.’"

Earlier on Tuesday, the Organization of American States (OAS) announced it would hold a special meeting on Wednesday to discuss the results of the Bolivian presidential election.

Bolivian Foreign Minister Diego Pary announced at a press conference that his country’s government had sent an official note to OAS inviting it to carry out an "audit", to check the entire process of vote counting in the presidential election.

The Bolivian Supreme Electoral Tribunal announced late on Monday that with 95.43 percent of the votes counted, incumbent President Evo Morales had 46.86 percent, while his opponent Carlos Mesa had 36.72 percent of the votes, leaving Bolivia's current president with a 10.13 percent margin.

To win in the first round of the presidential election in Bolivia, a candidate needs to get more than 50 percent of the votes, or, as an alternative, at least 40 percent with a margin of 10 percent from the closest opponent.

Mesa has refused to recognize the election results and has accused the Bolivian government of electoral fraud.

The OAS expressed concerns on Tuesday over the confusing situation with regard to the vote count in Bolivia, recalling that preliminary results released on Sunday showed that there would be a second round of elections.

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