The Borneo Post

Nicaragua kicks off strike as bishops move to reboot talks

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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

 ??  ?? A protester, who had been arrested for participat­ing in a protest against Ortega’s government, cries after being released by police in Managua, Nicaragua. — Reuters photo
A protester, who had been arrested for participat­ing in a protest against Ortega’s government, cries after being released by police in Managua, Nicaragua. — Reuters photo

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