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Thousands march for, against Nicaraguan government PDF print email
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Written by Jelena   
Wednesday, 23 December 2009 14:41
story.ortega.protest.afp.gi Tens of thousands of people, government protesters and supporters alike, demonstrated Saturday in the Nicaraguan capital of Managua.
"The only way for the government to change, as it has been shown in all these years, is for the people to go to the streets," said Dora Maria Tellez, who was a main figure in President Daniel Ortega's government during the 1980s but who now leads an opposition party.
"There is no other way," she said at the protests, which appeared to be peaceful.
It was not immediately clear how many of the masses were demonstrating against the government and how many had gathered to support it.
 
The anti-government protesters are demonstrating against Ortega's bid for re-election and the anniversary of last year's municipal elections, which the president's leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front party resoundingly won amid allegations of fraud.
On October 19, the country's supreme court lifted a constitutional ban on consecutive presidential terms, clearing the way for Ortega to run in 2011.
The U.S. State Department said in a statement last month that it was concerned about the "manner in which the Constitutional Chamber of the Nicaraguan Supreme Court reached a decision on October 19 regarding re-election for Nicaraguan officials, including the President."
It added, "The ruling appears to short circuit, through legal maneuverings, the open and transparent consideration by the Nicaraguan people of the possibility for presidential re-election."
But supporters of Ortega's say the government is acting on behalf of the people.
"Now the right has to accept the government we have now," said Larry Salinas, a militant with Ortega's party who participated in Saturday's demonstration.
The government is a "revolutionary government that is fighting for the people, and they do not see that," he said of the opposition.
The November 2008 elections saw the Sandinista party win mayoral races in 94 municipalities. Election critics cited many irregularities, including the government's refusal to allow foreign and local monitors, the delay in tabulating ballots and discrepancies between results certified by election officials and the tallies released on television.
Ortega was a leader in the guerrilla movement that ousted Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza in July 1979. He served as president from 1985-90. After three unsuccessful bids, he won the presidency again in 2006.

 

Tags: Year: 2009 Location: South America Category: Protest and Persuassion Category: NonCooperation Category: NonViolent Intervention Protest and Persuassion: Public Speeches Protest and Persuassion: Declarations by organizations and institutions Protest and Persuassion: Slogans, caricatures, and symbols Protest and Persuassion: Banners, posters, displayed communications Protest and Persuassion: Newspapers and journals Protest and Persuassion: Records, radio, and television Protest and Persuassion: Displays of flags and symbolic colors Protest and Persuassion: Wearing of symbols Protest and Persuassion: Displays of portraits Protest and Persuassion: Symbolic reclamations Protest and Persuassion: Performances of plays and music Protest and Persuassion: Singing Protest and Persuassion: Marches Protest and Persuassion: Assemblies of protest or support Protest and Persuassion: Protest meetings Methods of NonCooperation: Social boycott Methods of NonCooperation: Selective social boycott Methods of NonCooperation: Student strike Methods of NonCooperation: Social disobedience Methods of NonCooperation: Protest emigration [hijrat] Methods of NonCooperation: Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance Methods of NonCooperation: Refusal of public support Methods of NonCooperation: Literature and speeches advocating resistance Methods of NonCooperation: Refusal to accept appointed officials Methods of NonCooperation: Reluctant and slow compliance Methods of NonCooperation: Popular nonobedience NonViolent Intervention: Self-exposure to the elements NonViolent Intervention: Fast of moral pressure NonViolent Intervention: Nonviolent harassment NonViolent Intervention: Nonviolent raids NonViolent Intervention: Nonviolent interjection NonViolent Intervention: Nonviolent obstruction NonViolent Intervention: Nonviolent occupation NonViolent Intervention: Speak-in NonViolent Intervention: Defiance of blockades Video: Has Video

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