-
France-Iraq World Cup game suspended due to severe weather alert
-
Romanian parliament rejects liberal PM-designate
-
US temporarily suspends Iran oil sanctions, says nuclear inspectors to return
-
Maduro ouster put Venezuela on 'the right path': interim leader
-
Missed penalty spurred 'very angry' Messi to World Cup history
-
Shooting in Montreal, Canada leaves three dead including suspect
-
Oil falls as US waives Iranian sanctions and Nasdaq tumbles
-
Balogun chases 'inevitable' Messi in wild Golden Boot race
-
Defeated Colombian leftist calls for calm after post-vote violence
-
Belgium's Doku becomes father after World Cup controversy
-
Messi sets World Cup scoring record as Argentina down Austria
-
Magic Messi makes World Cup history to send Argentina into last 32
-
French TV presenter stood down over Doku World Cup comments
-
Ghana coach Queiroz says playing England 'easiest' World Cup game
-
Messi sets World Cup scoring record with 17th goal
-
Former Bayern stalwart Demichelis takes over at RB Leipzig
-
Colombian leftist candidate calls for calm after post-vote violence
-
Andy Burnham: 'King of the North' with Downing Street in his sights
-
Britons cautiously optimistic after PM's resignation
-
Latest developments in Europe's heatwave
-
Draper makes winning return at Eastbourne with Murray on his side
-
IMF director says Iran war fallout creating 'difficult moment' for Africa
-
Argentina fans defiant, 40 years on from Maradona's 'Hand of God'
-
Hormuz: Traffic flows despite Iran's closure announcement
-
Wikipedia won't let AI edit articles, cofounder says
-
Clive Davis: the starmaker who shaped modern music
-
Uncapped Coles named in England's T20 squad to face India
-
Qatar gas plant blast kills 13, injures dozens
-
Andy Burnham: 'King of the North' eyes Downing Street throne
-
Oil falls as US waives Iranian crude sanctions
-
Dangerous 'heat stress' has surged worldwide, study shows
-
England captain Itoje rested for Nations Championship
-
Interstellar comet likely far older than Solar System: astronomers
-
Antoine Semenyo, Ghana's man on the inside and England threat
-
Man Utd secure land for proposed new 100,000-capacity stadium
-
Two children found dead in car as France faces hottest day of heatwave
-
US suspends Iran oil sanctions, says nuclear inspectors to return
-
Two children die in France as heatwave blasts Europe
-
Stokes and Atkinson cleared by Cricket Regulator after nightclub incident
-
Ex-Wimbledon champion Vondrousova banned four years for refusing drugs test
-
Veteran Le Roy named new coach of Congo
-
Milan-Cortina chief Malago elected new head of Italian FA
-
Germany's Schlotterbeck out of World Cup with ankle injury
-
Any unfreezing of Iranian funds will not finance terrorism: Vance
-
Vance hails 'good foundation' for Iran deal after direct talks
-
Alan Greenspan: longtime Fed chief with a divided legacy
-
Leinster boss Cullen to step down at end of next season
-
'Has-been' Belgium stars scorched after Iran World Cup draw
-
Oil falls on US-Iran progress; pound holds up as Starmer resigns
-
Starmer resigns as UK PM, Burnham favourite to take over
Counting begins in Costa Rica vote dominated by narco violence
Vote counting began Sunday evening in Costa Rica after elections dominated by a surge in narco-trafficking and promises of a crackdown from the conservative frontrunner.
Laura Fernandez, the ruling party candidate, is the runaway favorite to become the next leader of a country long seen as a beacon of stability in a volatile region, but now battling a crime wave.
Polls ahead of the election showed that Fernandez, who takes inspiration from Nayib Bukele, the iron-fisted president of nearby El Salvador, could secure the 40 percent of votes required for a first-round victory.
A total of 20 candidates are running for the top job.
Fernandez is the protege of popular outgoing President Rodrigo Chaves, under whom she served as planning minister and chief of staff.
A victory for the 39-year-old political scientist would confirm a rightward lurch in Latin America, where conservatives in Chile, Bolivia and Honduras have come to power in recent months.
Chaves has deflected criticism for a dramatic rise in the murder rate on his watch by placing the blame on what he sees as an overly-permissive judiciary.
Costa Rica has gone from being a transit point for cocaine shipments to a logistics hub for Mexican and Colombian cartels, with a spillover of the drug trade into local communities.
The number of homicides jumped 50 percent in the past six years to 17 per 100,000 inhabitants.
Jessica Salgado, 27, said she voted for Fernandez as the continuity candidate, because she felt the government was on the right track, even if violence is on the up.
"The violence exploded because they (the government) are going after the ringleaders, it's like dragging rats out of the sewer," Salgado told AFP.
Her sister Kenia, 24, voted for an opposition candidate, however, saying more investment in education and healthcare was needed so that young people "don't go down the wrong path" into crime.
- Seeking outright majority -
Fernandez is hoping to win a big enough parliamentary majority to change the constitution and overhaul the judiciary.
Her detractors fear she could try to change the charter to allow her mentor Chaves to return as president after her four-year mandate ends.
Under the current constitution, he is barred from seeking re-election until he has been out of power for eight years.
As he voted, former president Oscar Arias, winner of the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize, warned that the "survival of democracy" was at stake.
"The first thing dictators want to do is to reform the Constitution to stay in power," he said, alluding to Chaves.
Fernandez insisted she would "safeguard democratic stability."
- Cocaine-smuggling hub -
The drug trade has sucked in the high-density "precarios" (informal settlements) of cities such as the capital San Jose, where shootouts between rival drug gangs are increasingly frequent.
Fernandez has vowed to complete construction of a maximum-security prison modelled on Bukele's brutal CECOT penitentiary.
She has also promised to stiffen prison sentences and to impose a state of emergency in areas worst hit by crime.
The opposition compares the confrontational, anti-elite discourse of Fernandez and Chaves to that of Bukele and US President Donald Trump.
Bukele is a hero for many in Latin America, credited with restoring security to a nation traumatized by crime.
He has rounded up more than 90,000 people since March 2022 as part of his war on gangs, with rights groups saying that many of those detained are innocent or minors.
About 8,000 of those arrested were later released.
"At what point did we go from dreaming of being the Switzerland of Central America to dreaming of being El Salvador?" left-wing presidential candidate Ariel Robles, who is running a distant second behind Fernandez, said during the campaign.
Another contender, centrist economist Alvaro Ramos, warned that "modern dictatorships don't always arrive with tanks."
J.Horn--BTB