Daniel Ortega: US rejects Nicaraguan elections: “They have no democratic legitimacy” | International

The President of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, with his wife and Vice President Rosario Murillo, last Monday, in Managua.Caesar Perez (AFP)

The regime of Daniel Ortega was affected this Friday A strong diplomatic setback. The OAS General Assembly in Guatemala has voted in favor of a resolution. Election last Sunday, In which Ortega was re-elected with 75% of the vote, directing the continental body’s permanent council to carry out a “collective assessment” of the political crisis in Nicaragua and “no democratic legitimacy”. Must be submitted by November 30th. The resolution was rejected by the Managua delegation, while seven countries, including Mexico, abstained. LAS Elena Baños, Mexican representative for OAS, expressed her concern to the Ordega government over Nicaragua’s political situation, but said her country had been sidelined during the vote following guidelines that did not interfere with the call. Estrada theory.

Nicaragua held a controversial presidential election on Sunday in which Daniel Ortega took part without real political competition, arresting dozens of critics after imprisoning seven opposition candidates. Ortega controls the entire electoral apparatus and parliament, approving electoral reforms in favor of the president and expelling the opposition from the political game. Opponents see the election as a “mockery” and at least 40 countries have rejected the results, including members of the United States, Spain, the European Union and several Latin American countries.

The rhetoric is that Honduras did not vote in this Friday’s referendum. The government of Juan Orlando Hernandez has become a strategic ally of the Ortega regime, in an effort to alarm El Salvador, with Fonseka signing agreements to demarcate the borders of the two countries in the Gulf and the Caribbean. Controversy over places in the Gulf. Naib Bukele Government Who first voted in favor of the resolution against Ortega.

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During Friday’s session, Managua rejected the resolution, saying the OAS was interfering in the internal affairs of the Central American country. The Nicaraguan government alleges that the election was fair and that 65% of the electorate participated. However, independent organizations such as Urnas Aberdeas confirmed that Sunday’s referendum was 81% higher. Although Ordega vetoed independent newspapers and foreign correspondents, the media was able to document the low turnout on the ballot boards, while the country’s cities were seen as empty, noting the opposition’s call not to participate in the process.

The resolution, adopted this Friday, establishes that elections are “not free, fair or transparent, nor are they legally democratic.” He asserts that democratic institutions in Nicaragua have been “severely undermined” by the regime and criticized the government for “tabled” efforts to promote democracy in Central America. The document instructs the OAS to immediately assess the political situation in Nicaragua, the results of which must be ready before November 30. They also demand that the Ortega regime release political prisoners who have severely violated their rights, according to complaints from their relatives.

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The election rejection has sparked a heated debate among progressive movements in Latin America. Communist Party of Chile supports Ortega The left-wing candidate is in trouble, Gabriel Borick, on election days. Chile has rejected the election results and the Communist resolution has criticized this official position. “The people of Nicaragua went to the polls to elect their powers democratically, and they did so quietly in accordance with their organizational structure and current laws,” the CP’s text said, shaking the dust in the middle. Political campaign. Borik had to stay away from his allies. “I call on PC to withdraw its position before Nicaragua,” he asked this Friday. Controversy has erupted in Brazil as Labor leaders (PT) leaders celebrate Ortega’s victory. For the PT, the elections “showed popular support for a political program whose main objective was to build a nation of social justice and equality.” The press release, released on the party’s website on Monday, drew strong criticism from its opponents and supporters. It had already been withdrawn by Wednesday.

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Esmond Harmon

"Entrepreneur. Social media advocate. Amateur travel guru. Freelance introvert. Thinker."

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