Stabroek News

Fifteen killed in Nicaragua protests, including Mother’s Day march attack

-

MANAGUA, (Reuters) - Fifteen people were killed and more than 200 injured yesterday in one of the worst days of violence since protests against Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega began more than a month ago, police said on Thursday.

The bloodshed was condemned by the Central American country’s Episcopal conference of Catholic bishops, which called it “organized and systematic aggression” and suspended talks with the government that had been scheduled for Thursday.

Witnesses said pro-government armed groups opened fire on the marchers during a demonstrat­ion on Wednesday, Nicaragua’s Mother’s Day. The march was held to remember the children who were among the more than 80 killed since the start of protests.

“The number of people killed as a product of the actions of delinquent groups who operate wearing masks is 15,” said National Police Sub-Director Francisco Diaz, saying seven of those died in the capital, Managua. He said 218 people were injured.

The army said it was treating some of the injured, including several police officers.

The government denied allegation­s by rights groups that the aggressors were government supporters and said it bore no responsibi­lity for the violence since the student-led protests started in April, triggered by proposed changes to the social security system.

The European Parliament yesterday condemned what it called “brutal repression” in Nicaragua and called for elections, echoing calls for Ortega to move the 2021 presidenti­al election earlier.

In a sign Ortega was responding to internatio­nal pressure, the government and the Organizati­on of American states issued a statement saying the head of the electoral commission, Roberto Rivas, had resigned.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana