CARACAS, Venezuela ? Venezuela's Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered opposition electoral officials not to destroy lists of voters following primary elections, a decision that was promptly condemned by opposition leaders who vowed to keep voters' identities secret.
The court order was sought by Rafael Velasquez, a mayoral contender who lost in Sunday's primary and called for the voter lists to be reviewed.
But opposition politicians said the decision appeared to be an attempt to intimidate adversaries of President Hugo Chavez.
"The secrecy of the vote is a commitment, and we're going to keep it," opposition politician Leopoldo Lopez said in response to the ruling. "There will be no court decision ... that will prevent what's happening to keep happening: that more Venezuelans are joining."
After a failed 2004 recall vote against Chavez, a list of those who had petitioned for the election was leaked and widely circulated. Hundreds of people complained that after appearing on the list, they were fired from government jobs or prevented from working for the government.
Chavez's government denied discriminating against those who appeared on that list.
The primary vote on Sunday determined opposition candidates for state and local races across the country, as well as the opposition's presidential candidate, Henrique Capriles. The 39-year-old state governor will face Chavez in the Oct. 7 presidential election.
Velasquez told reporters that he had a right as a candidate to request a review of the lists of voters in the primary elections. Velasquez asserted there were irregularities, saying "it didn't work as it should have."
He didn't publicly explain in detail why he thought it necessary to review the lists.
The Supreme Court ruled that within 24 hours the books with voters' names should be turned over to the National Electoral Council, the court said in a statement.
Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, who heads the opposition coalition, said its lawyers were studying ways to oppose the court's decision, which he called "absurd."
Aveledo said in a statement that many of the lists have already been destroyed.
"After failed attempts by the government to sabotage the (election) day and to distort its significance, they turn to the 'dossier of fear,'" Aveledo said in the statement.
Ramon Jose Medina, a member of the opposition's electoral commission, said he is worried about "the way they're using the Supreme Court."
The books were used for voters to sign before casting their ballots, and about 3 million opposition supporters participated in the elections.
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