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Ortega to win controversial Nicaragua poll, early results show - Al Jazeera English

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Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega is on track to win a fourth consecutive term in office, preliminary results show, in an election preceded by a months-long crackdown on opposition figures and candidates.

Ortega’s victory was all but assured before citizens cast their votes on Sunday, with only a handful of little-known candidates standing against him and the opposition challengers considered his biggest would-be threats remaining in prison.

Nicaragua’s Supreme Electoral Council said early on Monday that with roughly half the ballots counted, a preliminary tally gave Ortega about 75 percent of votes in the presidential election, which had been widely condemned as illegitimate by rights groups, several Western powers and regional organisations.

The council put participation at about 65 percent of the 4.5 million Nicaraguans eligible to vote. The opposition had called on Nicaraguans to stay at home in protest of what they said was a tainted electoral process.

Late on Sunday night, some of Ortega’s followers began to celebrate on the streets of the capital Managua even before the final result.

“Yes we did it, Daniel, Daniel!” they shouted in several neighbourhoods as fireworks went off, according to the AFP news agency.

Protests against Ortega, meanwhile, took place in exiled Nicaraguan communities in Costa Rica, Spain, the US, and Guatemala.

Shortly before the early results were released, US President Joe Biden accused Ortega and his wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, of orchestrating a “pantomime election that was neither free nor fair”.

Nicaraguan citizens exiled in Costa Rica hold a demonstration against the elections [File: Ezequiel Becerra/AFP]

Costa Rica, Nicaragua’s neighbour to the south, also rejected the election before the preliminary results came out.

On Monday, Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares also dismissed the election as “a farce against the people of Nicaragua, a farce against the international community and above all a farce against democracy.”

International observers from the European Union and the Organization of American States were not allowed to participate, and journalists have been barred from entering the country.

If the results hold, Ortega, whose Sandinista Front party and allies controlled the congress and government institutions prior to the polls, will remain president for another five years.

Ninety of the 92 seats in the country’s congress and Nicaragua’s representation in the Central American Parliament were also on the ballot. Those results were not immediately released.

Crackdown on opposition

As a young revolutionary, Ortega had helped to overthrow anti-communist strongman Anastasio Somoza in 1979 and first served as president from 1985 to 1990.

He returned to power in 2007 and has led an increasingly authoritarian government, according to rights observers.

In 2018, security forces and pro-government armed groups violently cracked down on anti-government protests in the county. More than 300 people were killed during the unrest and at least 150 people have since been arrested.

Ortega, meanwhile, had decried the demonstrators as “terrorists”, saying again on Sunday his presidency was “standing up to those who promote terrorism, finance war, to those who sow terror, death”.

In June, police arrested seven potential presidential challengers on what rights groups call trumped-up charges including undermining “national integrity”, working with foreign governments, and money laundering. They remained in detention on election day.

Dozens more opposition figures have also been arrested in recent months.

On Saturday, the Blue and White National Union, an opposition alliance, issued an alert after it said at least eight of its leaders were “abducted by the regime in illegal raids”.

Meanwhile, the Civic Alliance, another opposition coalition, reported “harassment, surveillance, intimidation, assault, attacks, illegal and arbitrary detentions” of some of its leaders around Nicaragua ahead of the polls.

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega faced only little-known challengers after his government arrested seven opposition candidates in June [AFP]

In his statement, US President Biden said Ortega and Murillo “now rule Nicaragua as autocrats, no different from the Somoza family that Ortega and the Sandinistas fought four decades ago”.

He called on the duo to take immediate steps to restore democracy and to immediately release the detained opposition figures.

“Until then, the United States, in close coordination with other members of the international community, will use all diplomatic and economic tools at our disposal to support the people of Nicaragua and hold accountable the Ortega-Murillo government and those that facilitate its abuses,” Biden said.

The US and EU have already imposed sanctions against those in Ortega’s inner circle, a move Ortega met by arresting even more of his opponents.

On Friday, a senior US State Department official, who spoke with reporters on the condition of anonymity, said the US government was willing to consider additional targeted sanctions but had tried to avoid measures that would more broadly impact the Nicaraguan people.

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