The Borneo Post

Nicaraguan govt calls for new talks after five more protest deaths

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MANAGUA: Nicaragua’s government urged its opponents Monday to return to the negotiatin­g table, after a night of clashes between police and protesters left five more people dead in the country’s escalating crisis.

Residents described scenes of terror overnight in the flashpoint city of Masaya, which saw running battles all weekend pitting residents armed with home-made mortars and slingshots against what they said were paramilita­ry forces and riot police loyal to President Daniel Ortega.

More than 100 people have died in the violence sweeping Nicaragua since protests erupted on April 18 against Ortega, the man who has dominated the Central American country’s politics for four decades.

The Catholic Church initially tried to mediate the conflict, but called off the talks after a crackdown on a march led by victims’ mothers on Wednesday left another 16 people dead.

Ortega’s wife and vice-president, Rosario Murillo — a figure widely reviled by the protesters — made an appeal to return to dialogue.

“We all want peace, we want dialogue, we want to work together and listen to each other, discuss all issues, because there’s a solution for everything,” she told state media.

“Let’s not keep suffering losses, pain, mourning in our families.”

The Church has said talks are impossible as long as “the people continue to be repressed and killed” by “groups close to the government.”

The latest victims in Masaya were killed between Sunday night and Monday morning, according to Alvaro Leiva, head of the Nicaraguan Associatio­n for the Protection of Human Rights (ANPDH).

The agency has identified just one of them so far, a 23-year- old teacher named Carlos Lopez, who was killed by a bullet in the torso — indicating “he was executed, no doubt, by snipers.”

“There is a profound violation of human rights” in Masaya, said Leiva. Catholic priest Augusto Gutierrez, whose parish is in the city’s Monimbo neighbourh­ood, said the security forces had launched a ‘generalise­d attack’.

“It was practicall­y an invasion of the city with heavy armaments. There were bursts of (automatic weapons) fi re,” he told AFP.

Gutierrez said the attackers were riot police and plaincloth­es groups who entered the city in pickup trucks, their guns blazing.

Multiple witnesses told him stories of summary executions by the police.

One young man of 15 “begged for his life,” but was shot dead anyway, the priest said.

Residents in Masaya have constructe­d barricades with cobbleston­es, furniture, sheet metal and virtually anything else available to try to keep out Ortega’s security forces, which they 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.

Protesters have captured a number of police officers during the clashes, while police have arrested several demonstrat­ors, many of whom say they have been badly beaten while in custody. — AFP

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors clash with riot police during a protest in Managua, Nicaragua in this file photo. — Reuters photo
Demonstrat­ors clash with riot police during a protest in Managua, Nicaragua in this file photo. — Reuters photo

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