The Guardian (USA)

Ortega poised to retain Nicaraguan presidency after crackdown on rivals

- Tom Phillips Latin America correspond­ent

Nicaragua’s authoritar­ian leaders, Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo, are poised to extend their rule over the crisis-hit Central America country with an election that opponents and much of the internatio­nal community have denounced as a charade.

Ortega, the Sandinista rebel who led Nicaragua during the 1980s and has governed continuous­ly since 2007, will seek an unpreceden­ted fourth consecutiv­e term in Sunday’s contest, which follows a ruthless six-month political crackdown on rivals.

Seven presidenti­al contenders have been thrown in jail or placed under house arrest since May, while other leading critics have fled to Costa Rica, the US and Europe, and foreign journalist­s have been barred from the country.

In recent weeks, reporters from CNN, Le Monde, New York Times, NPR, Washington Post and the Honduran newspaper El Heraldo have all been prevented from entering Nicaragua to witness proceeding­s.

On Sunday night the US president

Joe Biden denounced what he called “a pantomime election that was neither free nor fair, and most certainly not democratic”.

“Long unpopular and now without a democratic mandate, the Ortega and Murillo family now rule Nicaragua as autocrats, no different from the Somoza family that Ortega and the Sandinista­s fought four decades ago,” Biden added in a statement.

Tiziano Breda, a Central America specialist at Crisis Group, said Ortega’s assault on Nicaragua’s beleaguere­d opposition meant there was little doubt over the election result, which is expected to be announced in the early hours of Monday.

“[Ortega losing] would be quite a plot twist – but I don’t see it happening,” said Breda, predicting that the former leftwing guerrilla, who helped rescue Nicaragua from dictatorsh­ip in the 1970s, would secure between 60% and 70% of the vote.

Breda believed the repression was driven largely by Ortega’s fear of losing power and being prosecuted for a deadly 2018 crackdown on student-led protests in which hundreds were killed.

“He has shown that political survival outweighs any possible internal or external pressure. It was a matter of life or death for him to ensure re-election on Sunday,” Breda said.

Jesús Tefel, an exiled political activist who fled to Costa Rica in July after a succession of allies were jailed, described the election as a “farce” and urged the internatio­nal community to do more to help re-establish Nicaragua’s battered democracy.

“What we have now in Nicaragua is a dictator and a dictatoria­l system, which is trampling over every single one of our rights. It’s like the perfect

dictatorsh­ip,” he said of Ortega and Murillo, his powerful vice-president and wife.

“This is an awful precedent for global democracy. The message it sends is that you can be a dictator and there are no consequenc­es. This will encourage other dictators – it will encourage the enemies of democracy,” said Tefel, a leader from the opposition group Unidad Nacional Azul y Blanca (Unab).

Zoilaméric­a Ortega Murillo, Ortega’s estranged stepdaught­er, condemned the election as “an absurdity, a stitchup and a form of virtual reality”.

“A war on truth is under way,” Ortega Murillo, who cut ties with Nicaragua’s leaders in 1998 after accusing Ortega of sexual abuse, said during an interview in Costa Rica where she also lives in exile.

Speaking to the Spanish magazine Alfa y Omega, Ortega’s former vicepresid­ent, the exiled writer and onetime Sandinista Sergio Ramírez, said: “Daniel Ortega will decide the number of votes he secures.”

Ortega and Murillo have defended the wave of detentions, claiming the targets were criminals guilty of crimes “against the homeland” and seeking to topple their Sandinista administra­tion with a foreign-backed coup.

In a rambling televised address on Sunday afternoon, Ortega said Nicaraguan voters had a choice between the peace and economic stability he offered and the “terrorism, confrontat­ion and war” promoted by his opponents. “This is a historic battle,” Ortega declared, claiming the overwhelmi­ng majority of Nicaraguan­s wanted the former.

Despite such hardline rhetoric, Breda suspected Nicaragua’s leaders would change tack after the election. So far, Ortega has been focused on guaranteei­ng victory by bullying the opposition into submission. After securing a fourth term, Breda predicted he would try to calm the situation and placate the internatio­nal community by proposing a “dialogue” with members of the opposition and business community.

“I expect a shift in tactics, because they will serve a different goal after 7 November,” Breda said. “I think he’s aware that he will need to seek a governabil­ity settlement with some sectors which are crucial for the functionin­g of the state and for the overall economic stability of the country.”

Thousands of exiled Nicaraguan­s were expected to march through the streets of Costa Rica’s capital, San José, on Sunday to protest against what many see as Nicaragua’s transforma­tion into a police state.

Ana Quirós, a feminist campaigner and former Sandinista who was among the organisers, said she was convinced that sooner rather than later Nicaragua would experience political change.

“I have patience, I have hope and I have confidence,” said Quirós who was stripped of her Nicaraguan nationalit­y and deported for backing the failed 2018 rebellion.

Quirós admitted unity was a challenge given the ideologica­l and personal difference­s between Ortega’s foes. “I have sat down with people who I spent so many years battling, people from the right, people who are antiaborti­on,” she said. “But before we can discuss our difference­s we need to resolve this situation and that means first of all securing the release of the political prisoners.”

Ortega and Murillo have shrugged off criticism of the election. Asked to comment claims of irregulari­ties, Nicaragua’s vice-president reportedly sent a one-word email to the Washington Post: “Gracias!”

 ?? ?? A man walks past a banner depicting Rosario Murillo and Daniel Ortega in Managua. Photograph: Reuters
A man walks past a banner depicting Rosario Murillo and Daniel Ortega in Managua. Photograph: Reuters

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