
Retired Nicaraguan army major Roberto Samcam was a fierce critic of President Daniel Ortega / © AFP/File
Costa Rica police said Friday they had arrested four suspects in the killing on its soil of a fierce critic of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega in June.
Retired Nicaraguan army major Roberto Samcam, 66, was gunned down at his apartment building in San Jose on June 19 in an attack rights groups and exiled dissidents blamed on the government of Ortega and his wife and co-president Rosario Murillo.
Costa Rican police carried out several raids Thursday and Friday in an area of San Jose where many Nicaraguan migrants live, as well as a town northwest of the capital, and arrested four people in all.
A fifth suspect -- a 20-year-old named Carvajal who is believed to have pulled the trigger -- is still on the run, Randall Zuniga, director of the Judicial Investigation Agency, said in a video sent to journalists.
Police will now seek to determine "whether we are indeed dealing with a political incursion from another government," added Zuniga.
Zuniga said the crime was committed by "inexperienced individuals" hired from poor communities.
Samcam had spoken out frequently against the government in Managua, which he fled in 2018 to live with his wife in Costa Rica.
That year, protests against Ortega's government were violently repressed, resulting in more than 300 deaths, according to the UN.
- Silencing critical voices -
In January last year, another Nicaraguan opposition activist living in Costa Rica, Joao Maldonado, was shot while driving with his girlfriend in San Jose. Both were seriously wounded.
Maldonado had also survived an attempt on his life in Costa Rica in 2021.

Nicaraguan co-president Rosario Murillo and President Daniel Ortega at a military parade in September 2025 / © El 19 DIGITAL/AFP
After Samcam's killing, a UN expert group urged countries hosting Nicaraguan exiles to offer them stronger protection, saying "nowhere in the world seems to be safe for Nicaraguans opposed to the government."
For Nicaraguan exiles, the arrests were a step towards justice for a crime that amounted to "an attempt to silence critical voices," Santos Mendez, a representative of Nicaraguans in Guatemala, told AFP.
Ortega, who turns 80 in November, is increasingly delegating tasks to his septuagenarian wife, Murillo, who has a reputation for ruthlessness.
Observers have said that a recent wave of arrests and deaths of jailed opposition figures signal a new era of repression in Nicaragua as Murillo prepares to take over.
Thousands of Nicaraguans have fled into exile as the government has become increasingly authoritarian, jailing hundreds of opponents, real and perceived.
Managua is under US and EU sanctions.