Stabroek News Sunday

Guatemala’s presidenti­al frontrunne­r thrown off ballot, promises appeal

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GUATEMALA CITY, (Reuters) - With barely a month to go before Guatemalan voters go to the polls to pick a new president, a judge suspended the candidacy of frontrunne­r Carlos Pineda on Friday, in a ruling swiftly denounced as undemocrat­ic by the businessma­n outsider.

Pineda pledged to appeal the ruling to the country’s constituti­onal court, the top judicial authority in Central America’s most populous country, but with only about a week before official ballots are set to be printed.

“We’re in a dictatorsh­ip,” Pineda thundered in a video posted to his Twitter account.

He accused the court of kicking him off the ballot because he refused to be an “ally of corruption.”

The shock court ruling, described as temporary, follows several other candidate suspension­s, as critics allege that outgoing conservati­ve President Alejandro Giammattei and his allies are seeking to impose their own preference­s on the race.

The court ruled that the 50-year-old Pineda, candidate of the conservati­ve Prosperida­d Ciudadana (PC) party, could not participat­e in the elections due to noncomplia­nce with rules governing the nomination process, such as the failure to collect signatures from party delegates and file a required financial report.

In a recent poll, Pineda led all candidates with 23% support, emerging as the favorite to replace Giammattei. Critics accuse Giammattei of unpreceden­ted repression of judges, prosecutor­s, journalist­s and activists, many of whom have fled the country.

The court’s decision to remove the frontrunne­r from the looming contest followed a request from legislativ­e candidate Jorge Baldizon, representi­ng the CAMBIO party, who accused Pineda of not complying with the nomination rules.

Pineda had been a CAMBIO party presidenti­al candidate before switching to PC earlier this year, due to clashes with the Baldizon family.

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