Veering from democracy, Nicaragua defies U.S. rebukes
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[June 17, 2021]
By Diego Oré
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Police in Nicaragua
are arresting opponents of President Daniel Ortega and even dissidents
from his Sandinista movement in a crackdown ahead of November's
presidential election that poses a challenge to U.S efforts to bolster
democracy in Central America.
In the past two weeks, Ortega's government has arrested four opposition
contenders seeking to deny him a fourth consecutive five-year term at
the polls this year. The leading challenger, Cristiana Chamorro, was
placed under house arrest on June 2 after she announced her intention to
contest the vote.
In recent days, several others have been rounded up - including
dissidents from the Sandinista movement that first brought Ortega to
power in the late 1970s - despite howls of diplomatic protest from the
United States and Latin American countries.
U.S. President Joe Biden has placed strengthening democracy in Central
America at the heart of his $4 billion plan to curb migration flows from
the ‘Northern Triangle’ countries - Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
In response to the detentions in Nicaragua- as well as recent raids on
newspaper offices and bans on political parties - Washington last week
imposed sanctions on members of the ruling elite, including Ortega's
daughter.
Nicaragua is not a major source of migration to the United States yet a
failure by Washington to defend democratic standards there could
resonate in the Northern Triangle, where the Biden administration says
poor governance is a main reason people flee their countries for a new
life.
Central American leaders such as Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele are
already rejecting U.S. criticism of their record on democracy and human
rights.
"Central American leaders see themselves in their neighbor's mirrors,
and a failure by the United States in Nicaragua could be seen as
weakness that emboldens others to follow an anti-democratic agenda,"
said Tiziano Breda, Central America representative at the International
Crisis Group think tank.
Nicaragua has in recent months passed laws making it easier to prosecute
people for receiving foreign funding and for publishing leaked or
"false" information. Law 1055, passed late last year, allows candidates
to be barred from elections if they have spoken in favor of U.S.
sanctions.
"The law is tough, but it's the law," said Vice President Rosario
Murillo, Ortega's wife.
Diplomats say they were shocked by the brazen nature of the crackdown:
presidential challenger Chamorro was detained while U.S. Secretary of
State Anthony Blinken was in neighboring Costa Rica extolling democratic
values.
Nicaragua was also uncowed by the U.S. sanctions last week on four
members of the ruling clique. Within hours, police surrounded the home
of a former head of the American chamber of commerce, himself an
ex-central bank chief, and issued a warrant for his arrest.
Julie Chung, acting undersecretary of the U.S. State Department's Office
of Western Hemisphere Affairs, said last week the United States could go
further and impose broad trade sanctions.
But Breda warned that could be counterproductive by increasing poverty
levels in the country of 6.5 million people, stoking migration and
further destabilizing the region. Before taking further punitive action,
Washington should try using existing sanctions to win concession from
Ortega, he said.
"They should try through diplomatic rapprochement to offer incentives
for Ortega to make certain concessions in electoral institutions or the
release of pre-candidates in exchange for possible lifting of
sanctions,” Breda said.
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A man, wearing a face mask for protection against the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19), walks by a mural depicting Nicaraguan President
Daniel Ortega, in Managua, Nicaragua March 30, 2020. Picture taken
March 30, 2020. REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas/File Photo/File Photo/File
Photo
FAMILY RIVALRY
Ortega first took power in Nicaragua after the 1979 overthrow of
U.S.-backed right-wing dictator Anastasio Somoza by the Sandinista
rebels.
Defeated at elections in 1990, Ortega returned to power via the
ballot box in 2007 and is currently the longest-standing leader in
the Americas.
Chamorro, a member of one of Nicaragua's most influential families,
was the opposition's strong card to defeat Ortega in November’s
election, just as her mother, Violeta Chamorro, did in 1990.
Police accused Chamorro of money laundering and "ideological
falsehood," a charge related to falsification of documents. She has
denied the charges.
Jose Antonio Peraza, part of the opposition "Blue and White National
Unity" association of groups calling for protests, said the
electoral process had been undermined but the opposition would seek
other candidates.
"The dictatorship wants everyone to say 'It's over'... but we cannot
give up," he said. "We have no other alternative."
In 2018, a series of anti-Ortega protests unleashed a government
crackdown that left more than 300 dead. The backlash prompted the
United States to blacklist top Nicaraguan officials, including
Murillo.
Following the latest detentions, the Organization of American States
voted a resolution on Tuesday demanding the release of all potential
electoral candidates and political prisoners, as well as reforms to
guarantee free and fair elections.
Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch, said
the U.S.-led response looked improvised. "They need to increase the
pressure dramatically," he said.
Washington should coordinate an international response to show
Nicaragua that it would lose international financing if the
candidates were not released, he said.
Last year, the United States disbursed $32 million in support to
Nicaragua and the International Monetary Fund approved $185 million
to help it tackle the COVID-19 pandemic, in addition to support from
the European Union and the World Bank.
"Their game is to stay in power at for the rest of their lives at
pretty much at any cost, and you need to increase the cost," Vivanco
said.
(Reporting by Diego Ore in Mexico City; Ismael Lopez in Managua and
Daphne Psaledakis and Matt Spetalnick in Washington; Writing by
Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Alistair Bell)
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