Nicaragua kicks off strike as bishops move to reboot talks
MANAGUA: A national strike got underway Thursday in Nicaragua to protest the government’s deadly crackdown on a two-month long popular uprising against President Daniel Ortega, hours after the Church moved towards rekindling talks to calm the crisis rights groups say has killed at least 152 people.
Anticipation of the ‘ peaceful’ nationwide 24-hour work stoppage that began at 12.00am ( 0600 GMT) had, meanwhile, triggered a mad dash to gas stations and supermarkets to stockpile grain, milk and vegetables.
Jorge Esquivel, 60, voiced support for the strike — to include all sectors besides those ‘ related to the preservation of life and the coverage of basic services’ — called by a coalition of student, business and other civic representatives, one of the main groups involved in the nowstalled talks.
He told AFP as he left a supermarket that “we have to make this sacrifice; in one day we will not die of hunger.”
Hours prior to the strike’s opening bell Nicaragua’s inf luential bishops announced they would convene opposing government and civil representatives on Friday in a bid to revive negotiations aimed at ending the sociopolitical chaos plaguing the country.
In a statement, the Catholic clergy said they would present both their mediation offer to Ortega along with his answer, which the country has been anticipating for a week amid a sharp escalation in violence.
The bishops said the proposal and response would go up for debate “to seek a consensus that responds to the people’s longing for justice, democratisation and peace.”
The Church previously called off negotiations after a protest led by victims’ mothers was met with violent repression last month.
Since then the Central American country has seen an uptick in police and progovernment paramilitaries attacking activists armed with slingshots and homemade mortars in an attempt to trample the anti- Ortega unrest.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights voiced “alarm and deep concern” over Nicaragua’s “serious human rights crisis.”
“The IACHR strongly condemns the exacerbation of the excessive use of state force and the continuity of attacks by parapolitical actors and armed third parties, which the State has the obligation to dismantle,” the commission’s statement read published late Wednesday.
Activists have erected blockades on more than two- thirds of the country’s roads in a bid to fend off Ortega-backed forces. — AFP