San Diego Union-Tribune

GUATEMALA COURT OKS POLITICAL PARTY SUSPENSION

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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.

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