The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nicaragua set for new talks on ending political crisis

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MANAGUA: President Daniel Ortega and Nicaragua’s opposition agreed Thursday to resume negotiatio­ns to resolve a longrunnin­g political crisis sparked by protests against his rule, with at least 320 people killed in a brutal government crackdown.

Ortega said that the government is working to “set the table for negotiatio­ns next Wednesday” with representa­tives from the opposition, which is demanding his resignatio­n.

The opposition accepted his invitation to negotiate.

Ortega made the appeal during an event commemorat­ing the 85th anniversar­y of the death of guerrilla leader Augusto Sandino, to an audience of cabinet members, military personnel, the police and supporters.

It comes as the government faces economic crisis and a US$315 million deficit, as it struggles without funding and loans that would usually come in from multilater­al organizati­ons.

Nicaragua’s GDP shrank four per cent last year and some economists say it could contract 11 per cent in 2019.

Protests initially started last April over a now-ditched pension reform, and escalated quickly as they were met by a harsh government crackdown.

The Nicaraguan opposition accuses former guerrilla leader Ortega, in power since 2007, of establishi­ng a corrupt dictatorsh­ip with his wife and vice-president Rosario Murillo.

Negotiatio­ns broke down in June as Ortega refused the opposition’s main demands to step down and bring forward presidenti­al elections.

Protests lasted until October and as well as the many dead, more than 750 people were arrested and accused of terrorism.

Thousands of people fled to neighborin­g Central American countries.

Ortega’s handling of the protests drew internatio­nal condemnati­on and sanctions from the United States. — AFP

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