Vatican protests over expulsion of its ambassador to Nicaragua
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[March 12, 2022]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The Vatican on
Saturday protested to Nicaragua over the effective expulsion of its
ambassador to Managua, saying the unilateral action was unjustified and
incomprehensible.
Archbishop Waldemar Sommertag, who was ambassador since 2018, had to
leave the country suddenly this week after the government of President
Daniel Ortega withdrew its diplomatic approval of the envoy, known in
diplomatic language as an agrément.
Sommertag had been critical of the Central American country's slide away
from democracy.
"(The Holy See) is convinced that such a grave, unjustified and
unilateral measure does not reflect the sentiments of the Nicaraguan
people, who are profoundly Christian," the Vatican said in a statement.
It was the latest in a series of actions taken against Sommertag by the
Ortega government.
In November, Ortega stripped Sommertag of his title and role as dean of
the diplomatic corps, in what diplomats saw as a retaliation for
comments made by the local Church leadership criticizing the government.
In many countries of Catholic tradition, the dean's position is held
automatically by the Vatican envoy, known as a nuncio, regardless of how
long he has been in the country.
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Apostolic Nuncio Monsignor Stanislaw Sommertag (C) speaks during a
news conference in Managua, Nicaragua March 5, 2019. REUTERS/Oswaldo
Rivas
Sommertag, a 54-year-old Pole, has
openly supported the local Church in its position defending
democracy in the country.
Ortega, a Cold War-era former Marxist guerrilla leader who has held
office since 2007, clinched a fourth consecutive term in November
after jailing political rivals ahead of elections that were widely
condemned as not being free.
Nicaragua's Catholic bishops conference issued a statement before
the elections that said the country was lacking "the basic and
indispensable conditions in order to hold free, fair and transparent
elections."
The archdiocese of Managua also had denounced what it called the
systematic violation of political and constitutional rights as well
as "threats to the Catholic Church (and) offences against its
priests and bishops."
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Mark Potter)
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