MANAGUA -- Former guerrilla leader Eden Pastora ended his 34-day hunger
strike Thursday, after the National Assembly accepted his interpretation
of the
Electoral and Nationality Laws, allowing him to regain his citizenship.
Pastora, 61, also known as ``Commander Zero,'' began a hunger strike Aug.
22
to restore his citizenship, taken away by a ruling of the Supreme Electoral
Council
in 1996. The ruling was based on the fact that Pastora assumed Costa Rican
citizenship while in exile in 1977.
He announced to the full National Assembly that he was suspending his protest,
after being invited to address the body by a commission on human rights
to explain
the reasons for his hunger strike.