Kuwait Times

Top Nicaragua civic group calls strike

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MANAGUA: Nicaragua’s top civic alliance called Tuesday for a nationwide 24-hour strike to protest “extreme conditions” under President Daniel Ortega, who has yet to decide on reviving talks over the crisis that has left at least 148 dead. The day-long strike is set to begin today at noon (1800 GMT) “in solidarity with the victims” of the two months of unrest, which has seen brutal clashes between anti-government activists and security forces loyal to Ortega.

“This is a national and peaceful civil strike that covers the entire country and all economic activities, except those related to the preservati­on of life and the coverage of basic services for the population,” announced the National Alliance for Justice and Democracy, a key player in the now stalled crisis talks. The coalition also demanded an “immediate” decision from Ortega on the prospect of reviving negotiatio­ns mediated by Nicaragua’s influentia­l Catholic bishops.

The country has not heard from its leftist leader since last week, when he met with top clergy members, who presented him with a plan to expedite the poll and institute electoral and constituti­onal reforms - key activist demands. “Dialogue is the way to review the political system of Nicaragua from its root to achieve an authentic democracy and justice,” the civic alliance said. The announceme­nt comes after the country underwent a sharp escalation in violence in recent days, as police and pro-government paramilita­ries attacked activists wielding slingshots and homemade mortars in an attempt to trample the uprising against Ortega. The din of rifle blasts and mortar explosions echoed overnight and into the morning throughout the streets of Managua, even after government security forces forcefully cleared the barricades.

Economic upheaval

Activists have erected the blockades on more than two thirds of the country’s roads in a bid to fend off anti-riot forces and pressure Ortega into dialogue. But the makeshift roadblocks also have wreaked economic havoc: even in the unlikely scenario that the government “accepts an early negotiated exit” by the end of July, the Nicaraguan Foundation for Economic and Social Developmen­t (FUNIDES) estimates the country would post losses of $404 million and bleed 20,000 jobs. —AFP

 ??  ?? SAN JOSE: Costa Ricans demonstrat­e on Tuesday in solidarity with the students arrested and killed in recent protests against President Daniel Ortega. —AFP
SAN JOSE: Costa Ricans demonstrat­e on Tuesday in solidarity with the students arrested and killed in recent protests against President Daniel Ortega. —AFP

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