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Ortega Plans Changes to
Nicaragua's Constitution
Nicaragua`s new President,
Daniel Ortega, said he would
propose constitutional changes
to improve democracy in Latin
America's second-poorest
country.
Ortega, a former president who
began his five-year term on
Wednesday after nearly 17 years
in opposition, did not specify
what changes he wants to make to
the constitution or when he
would push for them.
''What I'm going to propose is
direct democracy, that the
people exercise power,'' he said
in a television interview
reported by local media
yesterday.
''This is our idea: deep
reforms, constitutional
reforms,'' said Ortega, the
latest in a wave of leftist
Presidents in Latin America.
The leader of the Sandinista
party, which lacks a majority in
Nicaragua's legislature, won
November's presidential election
on promises to fight the hunger,
poverty and corruption that
previous free-market governments
failed to end.
Only Haiti is poorer than
Nicaragua in Latin America.
As President in the 1980s,
Ortega and his Sandinista
movement confiscated businesses
and farms after toppling a
US-backed dictator.
Those policies, combined with a
us economic blockade and a war
against US-backed contra rebels,
plunged the coffee-producing
country into chaos.
Ortega has said he learned his
lesson and has dropped Marxism
for a center-left program.
Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez, a close ally of Ortega,
has said he plans to change his
country's constitution to allow
Presidents to serve terms
indefinitely.
Nicaragua's constitution bars
presidents from serving
consecutive terms.
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