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    Nicaragua pres Ortega poised to win 3rd term

    MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — One-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega took a big early lead in presidential elections Sunday, according to preliminary results, amid reports of protests and international observers being blocked from participating.

    Electoral council President Roberto Rivas said Ortega, the incumbent and heavy favorite, had almost 64 percent of the votes compared to 29 percent for his nearest challenger, Fabio Gadea. Conservative Arnoldo Aleman, a former president, was a distant third with 6 percent.

    The result came with almost 7 percent of the votes counted, but Rivas said a quick count representative of the entire vote gave Ortega a big advantage as well. The methodology of the quick count was not available.

    Polls closed with international election observers reporting problems with access to voting stations and with one national group of observers, Let's Have Democracy, reporting 600 complaints of voting irregularities, a handful of injuries in protests and 30 arrests.

    The head of the Organization of American States observer mission, Dante Caputo, said its observers were been denied access to 10 polling stations, which would account for 20 percent of the statistical material they had planned to collect for their analysis.

    "They have prevented our people from being there at the precise moment they should have been there and that is not remediable and will affect our ability to do our jobs," Caputo said. "We are navigating without radar."

    The European Union said some of its teams also had problems but that they eventually were resolved and they were allowed access, according Luis Yanis, head of the mission.

    The Ortega government, meanwhile, reported smooth voting in 90 percent of the country as supporters cheered and declared an Ortega victory before the first results had been reported.

    Caravans of Ortega supporters took to the streets yelling "Daniel! Daniel!"

    Gadea, who went into election day trailing Ortega in the polls by 18 points, thanked voters in a brief press conference for coming out en masse.

    "The attempt to discourage voting and create difficulties has failed," said Gadea of the Liberal Independent Party. "No one or nothing will alter the will of the people."

    Since returning to power in 2007, the 65-year-old Ortega has boosted his popularity in Central America's poorest country with a combination of pork-barrel populism and support for the free-market economy he once opposed.

    He seeks a third term — his second consecutive one — after the Sandinista majority on the Supreme Court overruled the term limits set by the Nicaraguan constitution.

    His opponents fear that if he wins more than 50 percent of the vote, it will allow him to change the constitution to run in perpetuity.

    The independent Let's Have Democracy reported problems in various municipalities located between 50 and 70 miles outside of the capital of Managua. Besides injuries and arrests, observers reported a polling place set on fire, election officials obstructing voters from opposing parties and protests by voters who didn't receive their credentials.

    The sporadic incidents didn't seem widespread enough to throw the official results into question. But it was unclear whether the OAS would question the results because of lack of access to polling stations.

    Claims of widespread fraud in the 2008 municipal elections led Washington to cancel $62 million in development aid.

    Nicaragua's 2006 election drew more than 18,000 observers. This time election observation is much more difficult and local observers were denied credentials. The OAS and the European Union negotiated access to Sunday's vote, but the Georgia-based Carter Center decided not to observe because of the restrictions.

    Ortega led the Sandinista movement that overthrew dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979, and withstood a concerted effort by the U.S. government, which viewed him as a Soviet-backed threat, to oust him through a rebel force called the Contras.

    The fiery, mustachioed leftist ruled through a junta, then was elected in 1984 but was defeated after one term in 1990. After two more failed runs, he softened his rhetoric, took a free-market stance, and regained the presidency in the 2006 election.

    If the left seemed to be rolling in Nicaragua on Sunday, a right-wing former general promising to get tough on rampant crime won presidential elections in the fellow Central American nation of Guatemala.

    Otto Perez Molina of the conservative Patriotic Party won 55 percent of the vote, topping tycoon-turned-political populist Manuel Baldizon of the Democratic Freedom Revival party, who had 45 percent.

    Perez, 61, is the first former military leader elected president in Guatemala in the 25 years after the end of brutal military rule. While that concerns some international groups, Guatemala has a young population, and many don't remember the war.

    Witnesses say hundreds of villages were obliterated by the army's scorched-earth policy. Perez has said there were no massacres or genocide. He has never been charged with any atrocities and was one of the army's chief representatives in negotiating the 1996 peace accords.

    Outgoing center-left President Alvaro Colom, who can't run for re-election, urged both sides to respect the results.

    More than half of Guatemalans live in poverty in a nation 14 million overrun by organized crime and Mexican drug cartels. The country has one of the highest murder rates in the world, a product of gang and cartel violence, along with the legacy of its 1960-1996 civil war in which the army, police and paramilitary are blamed for killed the vast majority of 200,000 victims — most of whom were Mayan.

    Perez's campaigning focused on fighting the street gangs and cartels.

     
    • Yahoo  •  6 mths ago
      Hugo Chavez is distorting politics and economies all throughout Latin America, he's propping these nations/leaders up with oil and gas money while sabotaging legitimate democracy movements. These are far-left leaders who do not trust the people to decide their own course, or choose their own leaders. Venezualan oil and natural gas money is creating massive distortions in Latin American economies that will reverberate negatively for years. Chavez is creating massive welfare states throughout Latin America, that will fail when the oil and gas money fails, or when Venezuela's economy fails, and Chavez is no longer able to ship oil, natural gas and aid money to these countries. When this money runs out violence and economic instability will ensue, and much of it will be on Hugo Chavez's head...and others who have sabotaged democracy in Latin America, with ongoing left-wing dictatorships and attacks on democratic opposition parties. These left-wing dictatorships are actually just nations turned into giant corporations with Chavez and other dictators as CEO's. Corporate employees can't vote....the citizens of left-wing dictatorships can't vote. (or their votes do not count because of corruption). These left wing dictator states are just new versions of oil and gas corporatism, disguised as compassion. These oil and natural gas corporate states have failed in the Mid-east, and they'll fail in Latin America, because they deny the voice and the VOTE of the people.
      • so 6 mths ago
        we need somebody like Hugo Chavez in the USA !!!!!!!!!!!
      • Micheal 6 mths ago
        So, you #$%$
      • Nommen 6 mths ago
        No one from the United States has any moral standing from which to levy any kind of condemnation of any the current Central and South American regimes. But, of course, we do and will.
    • Fred  •  Las Vegas, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Of course he'll win a 3rd term! He is their Dictator!
    • WILLIAM  •  6 mths ago
      This board is full of ignorant brainwashed Americans especially those like MJP who called all Central and South Americans animals.

      For over a century the US in plutocratic relationship with corporations,literally enslaved South and Central Americans under viscous right wing dictators whose long history of slaughter is well documented.

      Peoples of all these countries were simply used and abused with full US participation and military,economic and political backing.There was no way that democracy,liberty and freedom was going to exist anywhere where US profit interests existed as evidenced by the US's (CIA) toppling of the democratically elected President Allende of Chile in 195 who the US replaced by their butchering friend Pinochet who preceded to connit crimes against humanity and was later charged for same.

      A few years back when Bush and Rice began to make threats Chavez,the President of Brazil told the US that if they dared pull another "Chile" against Chavez ,all hell would break loose.

      Chavez for example has been overwhelmingly reelected 4 times in elections that international observers attest to as been as clean as any US election.

      And for all you ignoramuses out there,the peoples of Central and South America are one hell of a lot better off under the Chavezs' and Ortegas' than they ever weere under US /corporate/dictatorship rule same as Cubans were after Castro ousted that vile murderous US dictator friend of the US and the Mafia and the corporations which sucked the country dry.
    • Vlad  •  6 mths ago
      I wonder why dictators even bother calling themselves "President" anymore? Just be honest and declare yourself "King", and since your son will succeed you, proclaim a new "Royal Family" while you're at it.
      • UCANTFIXSTUPID 6 mths ago
        dumbama has no sons, so will he, by executive order, proclaim one of the little munchkins as his successor?
      • Why Not 6 mths ago
        He's not a dictator, he was elected by the people of his country. His election was more democratic than Bush's first election. Sad as that may be.
    • Cheo  •  Managua, Nicaragua  •  6 mths ago
      I am an American Citizen as well as Nicaraguan with dual legal citizenship, participated in the elections as an observer for my political party which is against Ortega, and these elections are the worst elections fraud wise in the history of the world in any country because the people responsible of organizing the elections were from the party of current government which is corrupt and seeking an illegal reelection which they stated they were "neutral" and later identified by there own admittance to be part of the corrupt government, and a dictatorship is starting all over again here, we don't want to wait like Libya, Egypt and Iran for US and ONU to expel these people which are assassins, rapists, among other things wanted for international hate crimes against the Geneva conventions acts established in times of war, they want to eliminate anybody who is against them and shut us up for having a difference of opinion.We ask the American people and the ONU to help us now! and not to wait for a long and bloody war, please respond quick, while you have local support with us which is the majority of the Nicaraguan, we will show you in a legal election hosted by neutral international officials. Please responde quick!, Please share to as many people as possible, any latino that you know or nicaraguan, so maybe we can be heard, or i can share this on the media on a more public level.
    • Marcos  •  Rio de Janeiro, Brazil  •  6 mths ago
      stupid is as stupid does..........
    • Fred  •  6 mths ago
      Third Term?? seems like we got another Putin!
    • Sean  •  Saint James, United States  •  6 mths ago
      El Presidente for Life, Viva La revolucion.... Ortega joins such Luminaries as Idi Amin Dada, Hugo Chavez, Fido Castro, The Duvaliers, Stalin, Mao, Uncle Ho, Mobuto, Ghaddafi....
      • chris 6 mths ago
        It is possible that Ortega was elected because the economic system is broken and needs to be fixed. It is possible that the poor are tired of being poor, and see leftist leaders such as Ortega as their only way out. Let's work on solving issues of absolute poverty, malnutrition, and lack of education. Then, we'd have less immigrating illegally to this country. It would also ensure that the poor won't rush to demagogues on the far right or the far left.

        PS... Ortega is an elected leader, like it or not.
      • Sean 6 mths ago
        Yes, is it possible that since Ortega has been leader for 2 previous terms what has he done to fix the problem? what Initiatives has he put forth? Is it possible that he is an Oligarch interested only in keeping power?. Wait I'll put my Che T-shirt on we can sing the Internationale and Kumbaya and all will be better for the proleteriat masses against the power of the fascists.
      • Sean 6 mths ago
        Oh and Illegal Nicaraguans are less than 1/100th of 1% of the Illegals coming to this country jefe.... As to you PS, well= Hitler was elected, Stalin was elected, Ghaddafi was elected, Pinochet was elected, Mussolini was elected, So saying that he was elected as that absolves him,really doesnt mean Jack....
    • dagoldeneagle  •  6 mths ago
      Time for us to go in, enforce a "no fly zone", and start bombing and then lynch him like we did to Gaddafi, and impose a Sharia law based Islamic regime lol
    • Fred  •  Las Vegas, United States  •  6 mths ago
      "More than half of Guatemalans live in poverty in a nation 14 million overrun by organized crime and Mexican drug cartels. The country has one of the highest murder rates in the world, a product of gang and cartel violence, along with the legacy of its 1960-1996 civil war in which the army, police and paramilitary are blamed for killed the vast majority of 200,000 victims — most of whom were Mayan." How's Communinism working out for you?
      • Richard 6 mths ago
        fred 2 to 1 odds on gutamala being infiltrated by american agents look for a american military in guatamala after obama gets un -re-elected ...romney 2012
      • Richard 6 mths ago
        american soldiers need to occupy guatamala ....problem solved guatamala is a illegal alien smuggling rout that originates in brazil ,peru,venezuela paraguay,peru,argentina ....what are americans waiting for ....send in a airbourne division the american soldiers will love the adventure and purpose of choking out the smugglers and traffickers ///a few dead marxists on the way would be the cherry on top .
      • Why Not 6 mths ago
        Ummm...Fred ...your ignorance is staggering....Guatemala has never been a "communist" or "socialist" nation. It is a former right-wing military dictatorship (supported by the US - Reagan) that waged a war on it's own citizens for years. The General that is now saying there were no massacres that won the election was part of that war. So how's that Fascism working out for you Fred?
    • PeterS  •  Cleveland, United States  •  6 mths ago
      How do you lose when you own the country? He's as bad as Fidel Castro, his hero.
    • so  •  Irvine, United States  •  6 mths ago
      well, there were all those international bodies "supervising" the elections in Nicaragua, and still Ortega WON, the question is who supervises the "elections" here in the USA ???, the "democracy" we have here is a bad joke.... the candidate that wins the popular vote does not necesarily wins the election, not to mention some "details", like Florida in the first "election" of the #$%$ Bush, when the supreme court had to declare him president weeks after the election, and the system was showing its collapse....
      • Micheal 6 mths ago
        SO, are you to stupid to understans how elections work in the U.S.? It was set up the way for a reason #$%$ so big states with large numbers of people can't force there voteing will on smaller states. I know when libs win its all good but when they dont WAAAAAAAAA. It works just fine it ensures no grp of states gets to always pick the pres. Ohh by the way retard the court followed the law you bumbas@ maybe if Gore did he may have done better.
      • Why Not 6 mths ago
        Michael...,.you mean the "libs" actually behave like the repugs?
    • Zephyr  •  Marietta, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Another leftist dictator elected through fraud and intimidation and who stacked the courts to overrule their constitution to permit him to run again.

      And I heard Daniel Ortega is running in Nicauragua again. I guess he learned from Obama well.
    • Richard  •  6 mths ago
      you know patriotic americans allways can agree that the best marxist is a dead one .we had a 50 years cold war with these marxist #$%$ the most horrid dispicable idea of governance and humiliation of a people only a meglomanic ,crimial or physchopath could possibly invent the frankenstein of political thought and practice .yet latin america is still after years of being a pain in the arse in the world a literal beggar and theive onthe world stage still puts these criminal tin pots whether they are far right wing goons or far left goons ......latin america is a narco problem ,a illegal alien problem and a marxist america hater constantly at our southern borders causing us far to much to continue business as usual with these juvinile dilequints and traffickers and marxist criminals and theives with is one of the same with them .......we in the united states should begin a stragedy to occupy bases in latin america station 2 fleets there and an air base or 2 with a couple of divisions of soldiers to stop this criminality and trafficking out of latin america to the furtherest south to the mexican border ..
    • Longhorn_72  •  Austin, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Cristina Fernandez or Argentina got elected to a second term, and now this guy is going for his third. Latin Americans sure love their lefties!!
    • chris  •  6 mths ago
      I want folks to understand that there is a difference between the "hard left" (Chavez in Venezuela and Morales in Bolivia) and "center left," who embrace free trade and capitalism but want stronger social safety nets. Ortega used to be on the "hard left," but is now on the "center left"... along with leaders such as Mauricio Funes in El Salvador and Lula de Silva in Brazil. A country like Nicaragua needs trade and commerce as well as a strong social safety net. A small country such as Nicaragua needs some protections so they can benefit from commerce without being exploited by larger nations. He's not a dictator, he's a center-left elected leader and we just need to relax.
    • Get Real  •  Tampa, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I wonder if all the absentee ballots from illegal aliens in America were counted?
    • trickytrunk  •  Cleveland, United States  •  6 mths ago
      we love there taco shells for dinner,yummy,and the sauce is pretty good.
    • The Not-So-Blind Watchmak ...  •  Cape Girardeau, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Remember those old buttons that circulated in 1940 in the U.S. that said "No Third Term?" Those, of course, were promoted by President Roosevelt's opponent, who was hoping (in vain) that the people would not want to elect him a third time, back when it was still permissible for U.S. Presidents to serve more than two terms under the U.S. Constitution. Well, in Latin American countries maybe they should try issuing "No Fifth Term" or "No Sixth Term" buttons.
    • Brit  •  6 mths ago
      Look up the video online called "Farm To Fridge" if you dare to know the truth. This is a good test to see if you have a heart and want to use it. Do you have the guts to face reality and watch it all?
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