Tag: Nicaragua

  • Nicaragua: Ortega crackdown deepens as 94 opponents stripped of citizenship

    Nicaragua: Ortega crackdown deepens as 94 opponents stripped of citizenship

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    Daniel Ortega’s authoritarian regime has intensified its political crackdown, stripping 94 Nicaraguans of their citizenship, including some of the Central American country’s most celebrated writers and journalists, among them the Guardian contributor Wilfredo Miranda.

    The move was announced by a Nicaraguan judge on Wednesday and sparked renewed condemnation of Ortega’s Sandinista government, which has been waging a dogged offensive against perceived rivals since June 2021.

    Last week 222 political prisoners, including some of Nicaragua’s leading opposition activists, were deported from Nicaragua and flown to the US – a move widely interpreted as a sign of Ortega’s determination to remain in power after 16 years as president.

    Nicaragua’s government called the deportees, who were also stripped of their citizenship, “traitors to the motherland”.

    Those deprived of citizenship on Wednesday included the internationally acclaimed novelist Sergio Ramírez, the poet and writer Gioconda Belli, the investigative journalist Carlos Fernando Chamorro, the auxiliary bishop of Nicaragua’s capital, Managua, Silvio Báez, and Miranda, an award-winning reporter who writes for the Spanish newspaper El País and the Guardian.

    El País’s Americas director, Jan Martínez Ahrens, called the decision an act of “vileness” that exposed Nicaragua’s “totalitarian drift” under Ortega, a 77-year-old former revolutionary icon who helped overthrow the Somoza dictatorship in the 1970s.

    Belli, who lives in exile in Spain, responded to having her citizenship removed by publishing one of her poems on Twitter.

    “And I love you homeland of my dreams and my sorrows and I will secretly take you to wash off your stains, to whisper you hope and promise you cures and charms that will save you,” she wrote.

    y te amo patria de mis sueños y mis penas
    y te llevo conmigo para lavarte las manchas en secreto
    susurrarte esperanzas
    y prometerte curas y encantos que te salven.

    — Gioconda Belli (@GiocondaBelliP) February 16, 2023

    Chamorro, 67, who will give this year’s Reuters Memorial Lecture in Oxford early next month, said Ortega and his vice-president and wife, Rosario Murillo, had shown “enormous political weakness” with their actions. “In Nicaragua, everyone knows the only… traitors are Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo. They have demolished democracy,” Chamorro wrote.

    Brian Nichols, the US state department’s assistant secretary for western hemisphere affairs, condemned the move, tweeting: “This deplorable act represents a step further away from the democracy the people of Nicaragua deserve.”

    Speaking to the Washington Post last week, Human Rights Watch’s acting deputy director for the Americas offered a bleak prognosis for Nicaragua’s political future under Ortega.

    “The country is on the verge of becoming the western hemisphere’s equivalent of North Korea,” said Juan Pappier.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Nicaragua frees more than 200 political prisoners, sends them to Washington

    Nicaragua frees more than 200 political prisoners, sends them to Washington

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    nicaragua prisoner release 47457

    Nicaragua approached the U.S. about its plan to free prisoners and the release was not part of a larger agreement with the U.S., State Department spokesperson Ned Price told reporters. All individuals aboard the flight were asked if they wanted to come to the U.S. before boarding and two people opted not to make the trip.

    The Nicaraguan embassy in Washington, D.C. did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A Nicaraguan judge denounced the prisoners as traitors being “deported” to the U.S.

    Ortega has claimed the prisoners were detained for their involvement in plots to overthrow him during 2018 protests about police violence and changes to the country’s social security system.

    The U.S. has been critical of the Nicaraguan government’s efforts to quell dissent by targeting protestors. Ortega’s security forces attacked demonstrators during the 2018 protests resulting in the death of 300 people and 100,000 Nicaraguans fleeing the country.

    The White House praised the release of the prisoners, saying it “marks a constructive step towards addressing human rights abuses in the country and opens the door to further dialogue between the United States and Nicaragua regarding issues of concern.”

    Francisco Aguirre-Sacasa, a former Nicaraguan foreign minister was detained in 2021 after criticizing Ortega and Murillo. His son, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, who is a screenwriter for television drama “Riverdale,” led a petition advocating for his release.

    Francisco’s daughter Georgie Aguirre-Sacasa was relieved to learn of her father’s release earlier this morning and expressed gratitude for the lawmakers working to aid her family.

    “There are no words I can say to thank the State Department, [former Sen. Chris Dodd], Sen. Bob Menendez and the administration for what they just did,” Augirre-Sacasa said. “It’s incredible.”

    The U.S. government is providing medical and legal support to the newly released prisoners “to ease their arrival,” the administration said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )