New York, November 10, 2004Reporter María José
Bravo, who was covering a dispute over recent elections, was killed yesterday,
November 9, outside an electoral office in the city of Juigalpa, capital
of central Chontales Department.
The 26-year-old Bravo, a correspondent for the Managua daily La Prensa
in Chontales, had just exited the Juigalpa vote-counting center and was
talking to several people when she was shot once at close range at around
6:30 p.m., La Prensa reported. She was taken to a hospital in Juigalpa
but was declared dead on arrival.
Bravo was covering protests by supporters of the Constitutionalist Liberal
Party (PLC), which has a majority in the National Assembly, and supporters
of the Alliance for the Republic (APRE) coalition, which backs President
Enrique Bolaños Geyer. Both sides were challenging the results
of the November 7 elections in two municipalities.
Yesterday evening, police detained Eugenio Hernández González,
a former PLC mayor of the town of El Ayote, and identified him as the
main suspect in Bravo's death, according to La Prensa. Police took
a .38-caliber handgun from Hernández. Some witnesses interviewed
by La Prensa claimed to have seen Hernández reach for a
handgun just before Bravo was shot. It is unclear whether Bravo was targeted,
and, if so, what the motive for her killing was.
After the results of the November 7 elections were announced this week
confirming a major victory for the opposition Sandinista National Liberation
Front (FSLN) and a significant defeat for the PLC, several incidents of
political violence occurred throughout Nicaragua.
"We are saddened by the death of our colleague," said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper. "We urge Nicaraguan authorities to investigate Bravo's death
promptly and bring those responsible to justice."
|