The media appeals to the Supreme Electoral Court regarding the elections in El Salvador

The information was covered by the newspaper La Prensa Gráfica (LPG), according to which the American organization asks the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) to “ensure transparency and reliability” in the electoral results of the presidential and legislative elections scheduled for February 4.

The previous day, the website where the Tokyo Stock Exchange publishes the results suffered a network outage, and until Monday morning, the data remained frozen until 10:01 on election night, until an update appeared later at 5:34 a.m. showing the number and percentage of records prepared for the elections had doubled. Presidential vote to 70.25 percent.

In this regard, many JRVs in the country denounced the failure in the TSE system when recording minutes. “Votes are doubled when minutes are entered into the system,” JRV members noted.

According to El Mundo newspaper, it was the Supreme Electoral Court that confirmed the difficulties on Sunday night and the lack of security papers, among other incidents reported by electoral prosecutors, administration boards (JED) and municipal councils (JEM).

That newspaper indicated that the initial audit report was written “manually and on simple paper” in light of these problems faced by Jordan River vehicles.

Although for some the problem was logistical, involving the transportation of machines with a complete system and certified or “paper” paper, others estimate that the worst failure was the software or transportation system, while suspicions are raised about the possibility of fraud in the system.

Today, the candidate for the position of deputy of La Libertad from the Vamos party, Wendy Alfaro, denounced that some members of the JRV were not allowed to leave the voting centers, did not do anything and the authorities of the councils withdrew, El Mundo newspaper reported. Municipal electoral councils.

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The judges of the Supreme Electoral Court are expected to provide an explanation about the problems faced in transporting the election results by Jordan River vehicles.

Reports claim that some JRVs experienced a software issue that was not detected in simulations, according to an election source.

A member of the House of Representatives said: “When we were entering (the results of) representatives, we began to see that we had entered one card and it appeared to us that we had entered two. We did it again and it appeared that there were two more.” JRV told El Mundo, although TSE spokespeople said only one sound was recorded.

This morning, TSE Judge Julio Olivo confirmed to YSKL Radio that they are in the process of collecting records nationwide from JRVs to begin the final audit tomorrow, Tuesday, February 6. He said: “The minutes are the legal document, and it is what matters.”

Omani Riyal/lb

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