The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Released protesters claim mistreatme­nt by Nicaragua govt

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MANAGUA: Jailed Nicaraguan protesters said they had suffered beatings and mistreatme­nt in detention following their release Friday after a plea by Catholic bishops, as the death toll in two months of anti-government protests rose to 212.

Twenty-six young protesters were freed from jails in Managua and the flashpoint opposition bastion of Masaya in the first release of prisoners since the interventi­on of the bishops.

The clergy were tasked last month with mediating an increasing­ly bloody confrontat­ion between the opposition and government.

The bishops traveled to the besieged opposition city of Masaya on Thursday “to avoid another massacre” as police and paramilita­ries loyal to President Daniel Ortega prepared an assault on opposition-held neighborho­ods of the city.

They said police commission­er Ramon Avellan committed to end attacks by police and pro-Ortega paramilita­ries and release those arrested during the protests.

Bayron Hernandez, 16, said he had been beaten on the head with a rifle butt after he was arrested by hooded progovernm­ent paramilita­ries.

“They split my head open with an AK (rifle),” he said after he was handed over to a human rights group at Masaya’s San Miguel church.

Evert Padilla, freed from Managua’s El Chipote prison, said he was held on the ground and kicked during an arrest at his home. The 23-year-old spoke after being handed over to Church authoritie­s at Managua Cathedral.

Avellan “told us that he was going to make the call to suspend all harassment” in Masaya, Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes said.

“Let’s see if it’s really true,” said Brenes, who led the influentia­l bishops’ mission to the flashpoint city with the Vatican’s envoy to Nicaragua Waldemar Stanislaw Sommertag.

Masaya, once a stronghold of Ortega’s Sandinista revolution, has been a focal point of protests aimed at forcing him out of office.

Last Monday, it declared itself to be in rebellion against his government.

At least 23 people have been killed in the city since the unrest began.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights said Friday that the death toll during two months of anti-government unrest has risen to 212, faulting Ortega’s government for ‘serious’ human rights violations.

“Nicaragua has not fulfilled its internatio­nal obligation­s to respect, protect and guarantee human rights in the context of the social protests that began on April 18,” the rights body said in a report after its visit to the Central American country.

“On the contrary, the IACHR found that the state response has been characteri­zed by the repression and criminaliz­ation of the demonstrat­ors and the social movement they represent, which has resulted in serious violations of human rights,” the 97-page document said.

The Washington-based group said more than 1,300 people had been wounded in the unrest.

“Thanks to the IACHR for showing the truth of the genocide perpetrate­d against the people of Nicaragua by the government,” said the Auxiliary Bishop of Managua Silvio Baez.

Canada condemned Ortega’s crackdown on protesters, saying it is devastatin­g the Latin American country and raising regional security concerns.

“We condemn the killings of unarmed protesters by state security forces and paramilita­ry groups and the crackdowns in Managua and Masaya,” Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said in a statement.

Nicaragua’s Foreign Minister Denis Moncada rejected the report as “subjective, distorted, prejudiced and plainly biased.” — AFP

 ??  ?? A member of Nicaraguan Associatio­n Pro-Human Rights (ANDPH) and priest Elvin Roman walk with liberated men who were arrested during anti-government protests in Masaya, Nicaragua. — Reuters photo
A member of Nicaraguan Associatio­n Pro-Human Rights (ANDPH) and priest Elvin Roman walk with liberated men who were arrested during anti-government protests in Masaya, Nicaragua. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Marvin Antonio Avalos Quezada cries as he embraces relatives after being released in Masaya, Nicaragua. — Reuters photo
Marvin Antonio Avalos Quezada cries as he embraces relatives after being released in Masaya, Nicaragua. — Reuters photo

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