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Lima, Peru.
Tudela stated that the electoral commissions sent to Peru are “obedient to a political agenda that is placing a series of pressures upon Latin America seeking to control the minds and public opinion of the people in an attempt to seek political docility, so that we will do whatever they want.” He stated specifically that his complaint was not against the OAS, because Peru is part of the OAS and has freely invited observers from this group to assist in the review of the electoral process. Rather, he took umbrage with “those observers invited to our house who represent no government, and who have been selected by nobody. These are institutions installed in cities such as Washington and Berlin, and they want us to do what they want-they want to organize our political systems to what they feel is better.” He questioned the form in which “these observers give pronouncements that could be interpreted as policy pronouncements, by which only one side is accused of irregularities (which supposedly being subtle cannot be proven), while the polarization and irregularities of non-governmental participants is overlooked.” Tudela was immediately attacked by the local representative of the National
Democratic Institute (The Carter Center), Luis Nunez. Nunez
stated that the “ideological neo-colonialism” cited by Tudela reflects
language no longer in fashion, because the world is no longer defined in
ideological terms. He said that Tudela’s opinion should be respected
because “We are in a sovereign nation, and after all, it’s but his opinion.
As a Venezuelan, I feel like an absolute Latin American and a democrat”.
Nunez then went to plead with the Archbishop of Lima, Juan Luis
Cipriani, to soften his statement that the Carter Center observers demonstrated
ignorance, and only wanted to impose their own preconceived plans.
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