13 July 2012
Last updated at 07:33
13 July 2012
Last updated at 07:33
Mr Lopez Obrador wants the results of the vote to be thrown out
The
runner-up in Mexico's presidential election, Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador, has filed a legal challenge to the result of the 1 July vote.
He said he would prove that illicit money was used to buy
votes and secure the victory of centrist candidate Enrique Pena Nieto,
who denies this.
Mr Lopez Obrador wants the result of the vote to be deemed invalid.
Mr Pena Nieto was confirmed the winner on Friday after a final recount, with 38.21% to Mr Lopez Obrador's 31.59%.
'Sore loser'
Leftist leaders carried boxes of documents to the IFE to back up their claim
Mr Lopez Obrador, from the Party of the Democratic Revolution
(PRD), lodged the challenge to Mexico's Federal Electoral Institute
(IFE) just hours before the midnight filing deadline.
"The purchase and manipulation of millions of votes cannot
give certainty to any result nor to the overall electoral process," he
told reporters.
Mr Lopez Obrador also said Mr Pena Nieto had broken campaign
rules by overspending and that Mexico's media was biased in favour of
the PRI candidate.
"Article 41 of the constitution, which states that elections
must be free and fair, was violated," the left-wing Mr Lopez Obrador
said.
In 2006, after losing the presidential election by a narrow
margin, he led weeks of protests that caused disruption in central areas
of Mexico City.
Pedro Joaquin Coldwell, the head of Mr Pena Nieto's
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), dismissed Mr Lopez Obrador's
accusations as "baseless".
He also described the PRD candidate as a "sore loser".
Mr Pena Nieto is seeking to return the PRI to the presidency after 12 years in opposition
Mr Lopez Obrador's accusations of irregularities led to a
re-check of about 50% of votes after the 1 July poll's results were
announced.
The electoral body then said that following the recount there was no reason not to accept the result.
The IFE will early next week submit the complaints and the
evidence to the Federal Electoral Court. The court has until early
September to address the complaints and rule on the validity of the
election.
Source: BBC
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