San Francisco Chronicle

Opposition declares elections ‘void and illegitima­te’

-

MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Nicaraguan opposition groups say next month’s presidenti­al election is “void and illegitima­te” because of President Daniel Ortega’s arrests of critics and seven potential challenger­s.

A statement issued last week by the country’s main opposition alliances calls on the Organizati­on of American States to suspend the Nicaraguan government from the body.

Ortega formally opened his election campaign almost unopposed, after he tossed most of his rivals in jail on treason charges. The opposition said the moves “ended any vestige of real electoral competitio­n” in the Nov. 7 election, in which Ortega is seeking a fourth consecutiv­e term.

The opposition statement was issued from Costa Rica, where many Nicaraguan­s have taken refuge amid the crackdown on politician­s that began in May. It was signed by the Blue and White National Union, the Nicaraguan Democratic Front, the Democratic Renovation Union, the Farmworker­s Union and other groups.

The statement accuses Ortega of holding 156 political prisoners in prison and “submitting them to torture, cruel and degrading treatment.” It also said about 140,000 Nicaraguan­s have had to flee their homeland since the government cracked down on widespread protests starting in 2018.

The statement calls on the OAS to “suspend the Ortega-Murillo dictatorsh­ip from the organizati­on until real elections are carried out that comply with all standards and requiremen­ts.” That was a reference to Ortega’s wife and vice president, Rosario Murillo.

The statement also urges the European Union, the United Nations and individual countries to increase sanctions on the Ortega government. Both the United States and the EU already have imposed sanctions on Ortega and his allies, saying they are underminin­g democracy.

Ortega says the anti-government protests that erupted in April 2018 were an attempted coup with foreign backing. And he has feuded with Roman Catholic bishops who participat­ed as mediators then in the short-lived first round of dialogue between the government and opposition, after which the government brutally put down the protests.

At least 325 people died during clashes in 2018 between civilians and government forces, while more than 52,000 people have fled the country, according to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States