The group will also indict the head of the Special Prosecutor Against Impunity (FECI), Rafael Curruchiche, and the seventh criminal judge, Fredy Orellana, with the crimes of voting abuse, subterfuge, compulsory voting, unconstitutional resolutions and violating the law of laws.
These included the actions taken with the aim of ordering the temporary suspension of the Movimiento Semilla party, which directly undermines the votes cast.
They reiterated that they are violating Article 92 of the Law on Elections and Political Parties, which clearly states that groups cannot be suspended during the process.
The three officers got into situations that amounted to threats and harassment against the TSE authorities and the director of that facility’s civil registry, Mario Muñoz.
The indigenous authorities condemned the opening of a criminal investigation into the refusal to comply with the illegal suspension order for Semilla.
They added that the FECI’s decision contradicts the decision of the Constitutional Court of July 13, which orders the suspension of the judge’s decision, annulling the said troupe’s participation.
They will demand that Porras and Orellana be stripped of the right to a trial, that an immediate investigation be conducted against Curruchiche and that he be removed from office to allow for an impartial analysis.
They will also seek the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the accused officers.
Various organizations here insist on saying that they will defend the results of the June 25 vote and condemn the State Department’s tax position on TSE.
The day before, FECI arrived at the Citizens Registry for the second time in a week, an operation that drew much criticism both internally and externally in the country.
jha/znc