GUATEMALA COURT OKS POLITICAL PARTY SUSPENSION
Activists blocked roads Friday in surging demonstrations to support President-elect Bernardo Arévalo after Guatemala’s highest court upheld a move by prosecutors to suspend his political party over alleged voter registration fraud.
Arévalo has denounced the suspension as a “coup” aimed at neutralizing him before he takes office in January, and his supporters are demanding the resignation of the prosecutors responsible. Street blockades that started this week grew from 14 on Monday to 58 road and highway blockages Friday.
Arévalo and electoral authorities had challenged the suspension of his Seed Movement party in late August, arguing that the allegations of voter or registration fraud are criminal charges and that by suspending the party the prosecutors were intruding on electoral issues.
The Constitutional Court ruled Thursday that even though the case involves criminal accusations, prosecutors can impose measures that have electoral effects.
Without his party, Arévalo may be hamstrung after he takes office Jan. 14. Arévalo says politically motivated prosecutors are trying to overturn his victory in August elections.
Prosecutors say some of the signatures used to register Arévalo’s party may have been false.
Protesters also reacted this week to the attorney general’s office seizing vote tallies from electoral authorities. The seizure was part of the continuing investigations into accusations of voting fraud that observers say are politically motivated.
Indigenous groups and rural farmworkers stalled traffic on major transportation arteries over what they see as a violation of voters’ will.
The Organization of American States observation mission said prosecutors’ actions appeared to be aimed at keeping Arévalo from taking office.