Push for recall referendum against Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro gains momentum
Ruling party vows to stop “crime against constitution” as opposition’s petition allegedly included dead, children and others ineligible to sign.

Facing mounting pressure from food shortages, looting and increasingly violent protests, Venezuelan authorities on Friday announced the next stage for a recall referendum against embattled President Nicolas Maduro.
But Maduro’s camp said it would go to the Supreme Court to contest the process, accusing the opposition of fraud in gathering the signatures needed to call a referendum.
The decision by the National Electoral Board (CNE) to let the lengthy recall process move ahead also came with a warning from the board’s chief, Tibisay Lucena, who told Maduro’s opponents that any acts of violence would immediately halt the proceedings.
After repeated opposition protests, Lucena finally announced the CNE would take fingerprint scans from June 20 to 24 to confirm the identity of people who signed the opposition’s referendum petition, submitted on May 2 with 1.8 million signatures.
That is the next step in a marathon process to call a vote on sacking the leftist president, whom opponents accuse of driving oil-rich Venezuela to the brink of economic collapse.