TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - "Our electoral period ends with the elections of 2021, when we will have our next elections," the former revolutionary leader told Fox News, adding that he would not countenance opposition demands for early elections.
"To move up the elections would create instability, insecurity and make things worse," he said.
The 72-year-old leader, who has ruled Nicaragua for a total of 22 years since his Sandinista revolution toppled a US-backed dictator in 1979, declared that the deadly unrest rocking his country since April has in fact ended.
"It's been a week now that the turmoil has stopped. Matters are becoming more normal in the country," he said.
He acknowledged that peaceful demonstrations for and against his government were ongoing.
The assertion that Nicaragua's turmoil was over followed lethal offensives by police and pro-government paramilitaries against protest hubs earlier this month.
The Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights said Monday that 292 people have been killed in three months of protests and repression by police and paramilitaries using firearms, raising a previous toll.
The unrest began as a protest against a pension reform plan that has since been dropped. But that anger mushroomed into a broad campaign against Ortega and his wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, who are accused by critics of running a corrupt leftwing dictatorship.
The human rights group said authorities have arbitrarily arrested hundreds of people in a continuing crackdown on the opposition.
Many were seized on suspicion of taking part in marches against Ortega's government, or providing aid to those agitating against the president, it added.
Thousands of students staged dueling marches for and against the government on Monday. Those opposed to Ortega carried crosses with backpacks hanging from them -- symbols of students killed in the unrest.
A pro-government student union voiced support for Ortega and referred to protesters as terrorists and putschists.
Source: AFP