Human rights groups are seeking release of dozens of people arrested in anti-government protests in Nicaragua on Sunday
According to police, 38 people were detained in the capital Managua, 8 of them were released.
The police arrested the day before warning that it would not be allowed to continue unauthorized protests.
Hundreds of people have died since protest actions demanded President Daniel Ortega to resign
When the riot police entered the expulsion of the demonstrators, the protesters gathered at the slogan of "Unity for Freedom".
President Ortega announced on September 28 that anti-government demo is illegal. The President also warned that unauthorized protest organizers will face accusations.
The "Joint Freedom Alliance" parade was one of the earliest protest demonstrations organized, as the police issued a statement saying they will take all the steps necessary to stop it on Saturday.
In a Saturday speech, President Ortega accused protesters "for march for blood, not for peace, they want their blood" they want.
On Sunday the police took the stan bomb and the can of tear gas to make the protesters dissolve, and it came into effect
In his [Spanish] tweet, Luis Almagro, the head of the National Organization of the United States, called for the Nicaraguan government to release detainees and cease to suppress peaceful protest actions.
Nearby Costa Rica President Carlos Alvarad calls for "Immediate termination of Nicaragua's suppression"
In a statement, he also asked for respect for the legal rights of Nicaraguans against protests and freedom of expression.
The Nicaraguan government has refuted the "interference" of President Alvarado into the internal affairs of Nicaragua in a statement [Spanish]
The current wave of protests began for the first time in April when demonstrators requested a planned change of the national social security system.
After a fatal clash between security forces and protesters, the protest actions expanded rapidly, protestors demanded President Ortega's resignation.
Mr. Ortega holds power since 2007 and his critics condemn him to become more authoritarian and restricted Nicaraguans freedom and civil liberties.
The president condemns the democratic participants planning democratically elected governments and coups stimulating violence.
Local human rights groups and the UN human rights bureau have documented suspected human rights violations including illegal detention and torture.
Police arrested at least five people on Wednesday night at a demonstration outside the Missouri State Ferguson police station. Arrest suppresses the protesters as the grand jury is expected to ruling within the next few days to decide whether to sue Darren Wilson, a police officer who killed unarmed teenager Michael Brown in August It was an escalation by the police to do. Police arrests by riot police were the first arrests in about a week. One of the people arrested was broadcasting a protest on the Internet, and he seemed deliberately targeted by the police. Three of the five arrested are from Missouri, one by Wisconsin, and the other by Illinois.
In 2002, in the city of Aksi in the south, the police fired people protesting the arrest of local politicians. Six of the demonstrators were murdered, causing opposition to Akayev. In 2005, his government collapsed with Bishkek's riot and robbery, and he was replaced by former Prime Minister Kurmanbek Bakiyev. Kyrgyzstan has always tried to balance the interests of the West and Russia. After the September 11 incident, Kyrgyzstan agreed to set up a US Air Force base in Manas, a suburb of Bishkek. This facility is scheduled to be closed in July 2014 as a logistical base for military operations in the US and NATO in Afghanistan. Russia has an air force base near Kant. Economically, Kyrgyzstan relies heavily on Russia despite China's progress in the past two decades. High unemployment rates and widespread poverty mean that Kyrgyzstan is the main source of migrant workers, many of whom find jobs in Russia.