The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US orders non-emergency personnel to leave Nicaragua

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MANAGUA: The United States on Friday ordered all of its nonemergen­cy personnel to leave crisis-stricken Nicaragua amid a wave of anti-government protests and violence that has left 230 dead, the embassy in the capital Managua said.

The US ‘ordered the departure of non-emergency US government personnel’ and urged citizens to reconsider travelling to Nicaragua due to “crime, civil unrest, and limited healthcare availabili­ty,” according to a statement.

“Heavily armed, government­controlled parapolice forces in civilian clothing, sometimes numbering in the hundreds, operate in large parts of the country, including Managua,” it warned, also advising citizens to avoid demonstrat­ions, which began in April.

Protesters are demanding elections be brought forward, or the resignatio­n of President Daniel Ortega, whom they accuse of establishi­ng a dictatorsh­ip with his wife and vice president Rosario Murillo.

The Nicaraguan government is planning a march for yesterday afternoon, while the opposition Civic Alliance called for a demonstrat­ion next Thursday followed by a 24-hour national strike on Friday.

After demonstrat­ions first began, the US ordered relatives of diplomatic staff to leave.

It has also cranked up its own pressure on Ortega to make progress in struggling peace negotiatio­ns.

The US Treasury put National Police Commission­er Francisco Javier Diaz Madriz and Fidel Antonio Moreno Briones, secretary of the Managua mayor’s office, on its financial blacklist, citing their roles in killings and beatings of anti-government protesters.

Also sanctioned was Jose Francisco Lopez Centeno, an oil executive the US Treasury alleged had siphoned off millions of dollars from two government­linked companies for his own benefit and that of Nicaragua’s leaders. — AFP

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