Firearm bursts rang out on Saturday in the city home to 100,000 people, where riots that started midday grew increasingly violent as masked demonstrators wielding homemade mortars and slingshots fought to fend off armed security forces.
Alvaro Leiva, head of the Nicaraguan Association for the Protection of Human Rights (Anpdh), said at least one sexagenarian had died after a bullet struck his heart.
Leiva said the gunman was a sniper--implying a member of Ortega's security forces or government-backed vigilantes.
Rights group says 121 dead in weeks of Nicaragua protests
The mortal wound came hours after the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (Cenidh) had raised to 137 the death toll in the Central American country, where demonstrations demanding President Daniel Ortega's ouster have raged since April 18.
At least two people had died in violent protests overnight, the Cenidh told AFP, one in the northern city of Jinotega and another in Managua.
Leiva said conditions were growing increasingly grave "because we are talking about crossfire, not tear gas or rubber bullets."
"The situation in this moment in Nicaragua is a crisis," he said. "We are asking the world to pay attention to Masaya."
The city just outside of the capital--known before for its tree-lined streets, traditional crafts and nearby volcano of the same name--has taken on the appearance of a war zone.
Demonstrators, many of them young men, huddled Saturday behind barricades constructed from cobblestones, felled trees and sheet metal, the ground littered with broken glass and spikes to further guarantee no cars would pass.
"We are fighting here because of the massacre of many people, the death of many children," one protestor told AFP, saying he's been actively demonstrating in Masaya for 15 days.
"We can say that between the government and the police, the police are supposed to protect the people," he said. "They're the ones who are shooting bullets at us."
The young man who died in Jinotega was killed during an armed attack on protesters who were guarding a road barricade intended to keep security forces back, according to student organizers.
"Paramilitaries linked to the government gunned down boys who were fighting in the streets for liberty and democracy," said a statement from the city's student movement, calling it "a night of terror."
In Managua, a young motorcyclist died from a bullet to the neck after two armed men aboard motorcycles chased and shot him, according to local press.
Demonstrators continued to block roads throughout Nicaragua as part of the mass protests demanding the removal of Ortega, a former guerrilla who has held office for 11 years but who faces increasing opposition, even from onetime allies.
"Unfortunately they still aren't showing political will -- they continue to kill people," one student leader, Victor Cuadras, told journalists upon landing in Managua after a trip to Washington.
"They shed blood yesterday and early today," he said of Ortega's ruling Sandinista party.
The crackdown was triggered by relatively minor demonstrations against pension cuts that mushroomed into mass protests against Ortega, who first came to power in 1979 as the head of a communist junta following the overthrow of dictator Anastasio Somoza.
Pressure grows on Nicaragua's Ortega as protest toll hits 27
A major force in Nicaraguan politics over the past four decades, Ortega slipped out of power in 1990 but retook the presidency in 2006.
Now in his third consecutive term, he is expected to remain as the country's leader until 2022. A key demand of protestors is to expedite that election.
The country's influential Catholic bishops met Thursday with Ortega to discuss a plan to reboot talks aimed at quelling the crisis, presenting to the leftist leader "the pain and anguish of people who have suffered in recent weeks."
Silvio Jose Baez, the auxiliary bishop of Managua, said Ortega "asked us for a period of reflection to give us an answer, which we asked he give us in writing"--after which they will consider the feasibility of reviving negotiations.
But amid that administrative back-and-forth the situation continues to spiral out of control, activists and rights groups say.
For young people fighting in Masaya, the conflict will not end until Ortega is gone.
"We are in a war with the government," a protestor there said, a black T-shirt veiling his face and leaving his eyes barely visible beneath a black cap.
"We will be free," he said. "This government will go."
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