The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nicaragua violence claims 121 lives — Rights group

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MANAGUA: At least 121 people have been killed in a wave of protests since April 18 against President Daniel Ortega’s government, Nicaragua’s main human rights group said Tuesday, calling it a ‘human tragedy.”

The Nicaraguan Centre for Human Rights (CENIDH) said another 1,300 people have been wounded in the protests, which have met with a violent crackdown from the government.

“This is now a massacre, a human tragedy where the goal is to exterminat­e all those young people who think differentl­y than or are critical of the government,” the group’s executive secretary, Marlin Sierra, told AFP.

“It amounts to state terrorism.”

The latest toll includes a young boy killed by gunfire during clashes Tuesday in the resort city of Granada between antigovern­ment protesters and riot police, the group said.

A parish priest, Wilmer Perez, earlier told the 100 per cent news channel that the boy was killed in a confrontat­ion between demonstrat­ors and government supporters trying to clear a barricade in the city, 45 kilometres south of the capital Managua.

Town hall and the local office of the ruling Sandinista party in Granada were burned down by protesters, and several electrical appliance stores were looted and burned, a local businessma­n told AFP on condition he not be named. He said the police did not show up at any of these places.

Ten people were also killed in running battles over the weekend in the flashpoint city of Masaya, near Managua, said the CENIDH.

Masaya residents armed with homemade mortars and slingshots faced off in clashes with what they said were riot police and vigilante groups loyal to Ortega, who has dominated the Central American country’s politics for four decades.

Separately on Tuesday, the Organisati­on of American States, which was holding its general assembly in Washington, issued a condemnati­on of the violence and appealed to the Nicaraguan government and other parties to “demonstrat­e commitment and engage constructi­vely in peaceful negotiatio­n.”

The city braced for a new night of clashes Tuesday, after several nights of attacks that residents say were led by riot police.

“Yesterday we buried one person, the day before we buried another. One was a 15-year-old boy. He begged for his life. He told the policewoma­n, ‘Don’t kill me, don’t kill me.’ But bam, bam, she shot him,” said Ramona Garcia, 83.

“We’re sick and tired of it. We want that son of a bitch Ortega to go. The people want him to go, all Nicaragua wants him to go,” she told AFP, speaking beside one of the myriad barricades residents have erected in the streets.

Built with cobbleston­es, furniture, sheet metal and whatever else is at hand, the barricades are meant to keep out pro-Ortega gangs, whom residents accuse of pillaging the city of 100,000 people.

The government blames criminals for the pillaging, and says it sent in riot police at the request of small-business owners. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Demonstrat­ors stand at a barricade during a protest against Ortega’s government in Nindiri, Nicaragua.
— Reuters photo Demonstrat­ors stand at a barricade during a protest against Ortega’s government in Nindiri, Nicaragua.

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