Navajo Presidential Race Draws Crowded Field of Candidates

The race to become president on the country’s largest American Indian reservation has drawn a record number of candidates with 19 filing for the office.

The field includes tribal President Russell Begaye, Vice President Jonathan Nez, three women, and others who have previously held or sought the tribe’s top two elected positions. 

The number is up from 17 four years ago, when a tumultuous election season was extended by nearly five months because of a heated court fight over a candidate’s ability to speak fluent Navajo. That qualification loosely remains because it will be up to voters to decide whether that matters to them.  

Candidates regularly promise to improve the tribe’s economy, increase government transparency, secure water rights and deliver basic services. A new challenge will be dealing with declining revenue as roughly one-third of the tribe’s budget is at stake if a coal-fired power plant on the reservation shuts down as planned next year.

One candidate is pushing hemp farms, another wants to build on efforts to designate the tribe as a Medicaid provider, some want to revisit the tribe’s ban on gay marriage, and others are promoting accountability and vowing to combat nepotism. 

Begaye’s office has been criticized recently for placing his daughter and chief legal counsel, Karis Begaye, on paid administrative leave rather than firing her after she was suspected of driving while intoxicated and crashing a tribal vehicle. She hasn’t been charged with a crime.

The list of candidates won’t be finalized until after election officials vet the applications over the next two weeks. Candidates also have a chance to challenge each other’s qualifications.

Russell Begaye, who is from Shiprock, New Mexico, advanced in the last election after the second-place finisher, Chris Deschene, was disqualified for failing to prove he was fluent in Navajo. Begaye easily beat out former President Joe Shirley Jr. of Chinle, Arizona, in the general election.

Shirley is running for the office again. His pick for vice president in 2014, Dineh Benally, also is running for president as is Shirley’s colleague on the Apache County Board of Supervisors, Alton Shepherd of Ganado.

The three women in the race are Emily Ellison of Chichiltah, New Mexico; Trudie Jackson of Teec Nos Pos, Arizona; and former tribal lawmaker Hope MacDonald-Lonetree of Tuba City, Arizona, whose father served as tribal chairman for 14 years in the 1970s and 80s.

The top two vote-getters in the August primary choose their own running mates and face off in the Nov. 6 general election.

Most of the candidates are from the Arizona portion of the reservation. They are: Kevin Cody of Pinon, Nick Taylor of Klagetoh, Tom Tso of Teec Nos Pos, Vincent Yazzie of Tolani Lake, Rex Lee Jim of Rock Point, Benny Bahe of Houck, Shawn Redd of Dilkon, Norman Brown of Chinle and Calvin Lee, Jr. of Greasewood Springs.

Those from New Mexico include Tom Chee of Shiprock and Lester Begay of Whiterock.

None are from the Utah side of the reservation. 

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Body of Woman Killed at US Border Returns to Guatemala

The body of a young Guatemalan woman who was shot dead last week by a U.S. border agent near Laredo, Texas, arrived Thursday in her home country and was turned over to her grieving parents.

Lidia and Gilberto Gomez received the white coffin carrying their daughter Claudia Patricia Gomez Gonzalez in the Guatemalan capital. Its cover partway lifted, they kissed and caressed the glass pane in which she was encased.

They were taking the body later to her hometown of San Juan Ostuncalco, outside the western highland city of Quetzaltenango, for a wake and burial.

Gomez, 19, who studied forensic accounting, had sought admission to a state university but failed to pass three admission exams. Living in poverty and unable to find work, she left for the United States about a month ago.

On May 23 she died of a gunshot to the head in an incident that is still under investigation.

The U.S. Border Patrol initially said that the lone agent fired after being attacked “by multiple subjects using blunt objects.” It later said the group had ignored his orders to get on the ground and “rushed him.”

It also initially described Gomez as “one of the assailants” but later revised that to say she was “one member of the group.”

Three other Guatemalans were taken into custody during the incident.

Relatives of Gomez have asked for an investigation of the shooting death and the border agent involved.

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Heavy Fighting Traps Civilians in Eastern Libyan City

More than 120,000 people are trapped inside the eastern Libyan city of Derna by heavy fighting between Islamists and forces commanded by General Khalifa Haftar.

A U.N. report Thursday said Derna had suffered through “unprecedented” violence over the past several weeks, including bombardments and airstrikes.

There are severe shortages of food, water, medicine and electricity. One report said there have been no deliveries of aid since mid-March.

Haftar’s Libyan National Army is trying to take back the city from a coalition of Islamists and local fighters, whom he calls terrorists.

Derna is the only city in eastern Libya that the LNA does not control.

Haftar is a fierce opponent of the Western-backed Libyan government in Tripoli. The central government is struggling to assert its authority across the entire country and is meeting strong resistance from militias and renegade armies such as Haftar’s Libyan National Army.

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Burkina Faso Abolishes Death Penalty

Burkina Faso’s parliament has abolished the death penalty by adopting a new penal code that strikes it as a possible sentence.

Justice Minister Rene Bagoro said Thursday that the revised document paves the way for “more credible, equitable, accessible and effective justice in the application of criminal law.”

The death penalty was kept in the version of the criminal code adopted in 1996, but Burkina Faso has not imposed capital punishment recently.

Many rights movements, including Amnesty International and Catholic Church activists have pressed the government for a decade to remove it from criminal statutes.

The decision to abolish the death penalty comes amid a landmark trial this year over a failed 2015 coup. Two former presidential aides are among more than 80 people facing the military tribunal.

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