Another Ortega critic arrested for ‘inciting foreign interference’ in Nicaragua

(FILES) In this file photo Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega speaks during the commemoration of the 51st anniversary of the Pancasan guerrilla campaign in Managua, on August 29, 2018. - The United States on June 9, 2021 announced sanctions against four Nicaraguan officials who support President Daniel Ortega, including the president's daughter, accusing the regime of undermining democracy and abusing human rights. "President Ortega's actions are harming Nicaraguans and driving the country deeper into tyranny," said Andrea Gacki, director of the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control. "The United States will continue to expose those officials who continue to ignore the will of its citizens." (Photo by INTI OCON / AFP)

Nicaraguan police arrested another opposition leader on Sunday as an increasingly authoritarian President Daniel Ortega seeks to tighten his grip on power ahead of his bid for reelection later this year.

Opposition leader Suyen Barahona is the latest Ortega critic to be detained, the eleventh political leader overall caught in a dragnet that includes four possible presidential candidates arrested and disqualified from competing in the November election.

Critical journalists have also been questioned by authorities in recent weeks.

Last week, a senior U.S. diplomat blasted the “wave of repression” by Ortega and his allies, adding the United States is prepared to review trade relations with the Central American nation if the upcoming election is not free and fair.

Ortega loyalists argue they are only enforcing the law, which prohibits would-be candidates from receiving foreign financing or the publication of “false” information.

The Managua home of Barahona, leader of the leftist opposition Unamos party, was raided on Sunday after three other party officials were arrested by police over the weekend.

The police said Barahona was arrested for seeking to undermine the country’s independence and sovereignty, as well as for “inciting foreign interference in internal affairs, requesting military interventions and organizing with foreign financing.”

Unamos blasted the latest raids and detentions.

“These actions against the Unamos leadership are part of escalation of repression from the Ortega regime against the democratic opposition,” the party said in a statement.

Earlier this month, police placed opposition leader Cristiana Chamorro under house arrest shortly after she announced a presidential run, seeking to put an end to Ortega’s 14-year rule.

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