-
China sports brands score NBA stars to assist global ambitions
-
El Nino set to be strong, UN warns
-
Man dies after setting self ablaze outside UN in New York: police
-
'Inspired millions': Modric praised as World Cup career appears at end
-
VAR 'taking joy' from football says Croatia coach Dalic after loss
-
Death toll hits 10 in Thai monk procession crash
-
Afghans come home but risk exclusion without any ID
-
Asian markets rise as beaten tech stocks enjoy respite from selling
-
'Coincidence of life' says Ronaldo after Jota tribute a year from death
-
'Royal wedding': Swift and Kelce kick off star-studded celebrations
-
Japan face Italy without banned coach Jones
-
Tajik names for Tajik babies: strict rules leave parents stranded
-
Ronaldo, Portugal advance after VAR drama to set up Spain showdown
-
From ketchup to car parts, Cuba gets private sector makeover
-
AI romance scam impersonating Dubai prince ensnares victims
-
'Not easy, but not impossible': Iraq's film industry sees slow revival
-
Portugal advance in World Cup thanks to last-gasp Ramos winner
-
Farrell flattery primes Ireland for Australia clash
-
Mission impossible? England take the World Cup high road against Mexico
-
'I was just missing a goal,' says Spain's Yamal
-
Ukraine, Russia vow escalation as strikes on Kyiv kill 27
-
'Royal wedding': Epic Swift-Kelce fairytale marriage begins
-
Messi meeting the "game of our lives", says Cape Verde coach
-
France's Barcola expecting physical Paraguay clash at World Cup
-
Do not open until 2276: US burying time capsule to mark July 4
-
Sciver-Brunt and Knight send England into Women's T20 World Cup final
-
Scaloni warns Argentina that Cape Verde success 'no accident'
-
Spain power into last 16 at World Cup, Portugal face Croatia
-
Spain ease past Austria with 3-0 World Cup win
-
Emotional Dimitrov enjoys redemptive Wimbledon win over Mensik
-
Endrick says versatility could help Brazil against Norway
-
New York ready for epic Swift-Kelce fairytale wedding
-
Ghana have 'duty to Africa' to progress at World Cup, says Queiroz
-
Rubio says USA 'screwed' by World Cup red card
-
Former Celtics star Brown in shock over trade to 76ers
-
Heat dome roasts eastern US ahead of holiday weekend
-
Progress, further delay risk for Boeing Air Force One: report
-
WHO declares cruise ship hantavirus outbreak over
-
US coach Pochettino '200% Argentine' but embraces Americana
-
Sciver-Brunt and Knight take England to 169-5 in South Africa semi-final
-
Ukraine, Russia vow escalation after Moscow strikes on Kyiv kill 25
-
Trump's massive July 4 firework show raises health alarms
-
Prosecutors can review Woods medical records in DUI case: judge
-
Pogacar expects Vingegaard Tour de France battle to last 'years'
-
Japan deploys bear cameras in mountains as attacks surge
-
New York ready for epic Swift-Kelce love story wedding
-
Djokovic has history in his sights at Wimbledon
-
Wildfires rage in southern France, 3,000 people evacuated
-
Ovechkin returning to Caps for 22nd NHL season
-
Hamilton gives F1 a piece of his mind over Lego cars
Nicaraguan 'dictatorship' is doomed, says exiled author
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega's "dictatorship" is doomed, exiled novelist Sergio Ramirez has told AFP, predicting the population will eventually rebel against the elderly ex-guerrilla.
Ortega, the 79-year-old who toppled a US-backed dictatorship in 1979 and then led the country for a decade, has shown increasingly authoritarian tendencies since returning to power in 2007.
He has seized control of all branches of government and shut down thousands of NGOs since major anti-government protests in 2018 which he branded a US-backed coup bid.
Ramirez, a hero of the 1970s Sandinista revolution that brought Ortega to power, is among hundreds of politicians, businesspeople, intellectuals, activists and religious figures who have been expelled from, or fled the central American country.
Many were stripped of their nationality.
The 82-year-old author of "Margarita, How Beautiful the Sea" and "Divine Punishment," who went into exile in Spain, is seen as his country's greatest living author.
In an interview in Guatemala where he was attending a literary festival, he said his homeland's seemingly "quiet, subdued, gagged" response to Ortega's repression belied a deeply rebellious streak.
"Nicaragua is a country that already shook off a dictatorship in the past (the brutal Somoza dynasty in 1979). And it tried to do so in 2018, which is why there was the great repression that left hundreds dead," he said.
"Deep down there is a libertarian spirit, a latent spirit of rebellion against any dictatorship. At some point, there will be a change," he said.
- 'Autocratic tendencies' -
Ramirez was part of a group of intellectuals, business people and clerics that supported the overthrow of the Somoza dictatorship.
He later served as vice-president under Ortega from 1985 to 1990.
But he broke away from the Sandinistas in 1995 in protest at what he called Ortega's "autocratic tendencies."
In 2021, he fled to Spain, shortly before he was accused by state prosecutors of trying to "destabilize" Nicaragua through his work and threatened with arrest.
The 2017 winner of the Miguel de Cervantes Prize, the most prestigious award for Spanish-language literature, hit out at Ortega's "isolationism."
Earlier this month, Nicaragua announced it was pulling out of UNESCO after the UN cultural agency bestowed its annual press prize on a venerable Nicaraguan newspaper whose staff were forced into exile.
Ortega has also pulled Nicaragua out of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), the International Organization for Migration and the International Labour Organization over criticism of his human rights record.
Ramirez said that, even if he were allowed return to Nicaragua, he would find it "impossible to live" in a country where government critics run the risk of imprisonment, banishment or worse.
"The Nicaragua I would like to return does not exist at the moment," he said.
C.Bruderer--VB