Manawatu Standard

Church negotiates safe exit for students seeking sanctuary

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More than 200 Nicaraguan university students were reunited with their parents yesterday after a tense night of armed attacks that left two dead and dozens wounded.

The students had sought refuge in a local church after police forced them out of the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua, which had been occupied during two months of protests against the government of President Daniel Ortega.

‘‘It was a really hard night. They discharged their entire heavy arsenal against stones and mortars,’’ said a sobbing young man who declined to give his name out of fear. ‘‘They wanted to kill us all.’’

Father Raul Zamora said the students came under fire at the Jesus of Divine Mercy church for more than 12 hours. He said a journalist from The Washington Post and a journalist from the BBC exited the church safely earlier yesterday, along with some wounded students who needed urgent hospital care.

The police onslaught was televised by local media outlets and covered by three local journalist­s who reported via Facebook Live.

Students fearing for their lives sent farewell messages to friends and family.

‘‘I did it for the country and I don’t regret it,’’ a crying girl said in a video that went viral. ‘‘Forgive me mama, I love you.’’

The police have not issued official statements.

Two students were killed, Roman Catholic cardinal Leopoldo Brenes said.

Yesterday morning, Cardinal Brenes negotiated with the president’s office for the safe transfer of students out of the church and to the Metropolit­an cathedral, where representa­tives from the Inter-american Commission on Human Rights were on hand.

‘‘We have said not one more death, and this keeps happening,’’ Brenes said.

‘‘These two deaths hurt.’’ Tensions in Nicaragua erupted this spring after the government announced cuts to social security. - AP

 ?? AP ?? Archbishop Waldemar Stanislaw, centre, talks with journalist­s accompanie­d by Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes, at the Cathedral in Managua, Nicaragua.
AP Archbishop Waldemar Stanislaw, centre, talks with journalist­s accompanie­d by Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes, at the Cathedral in Managua, Nicaragua.
 ?? AP ?? A student, who had taken refuge at the Jesus of Divine Mercy church amid a barrage of armed attacks, is embraced by a relative, after he was transporte­d to the Cathedral in Managua, Nicaragua.
AP A student, who had taken refuge at the Jesus of Divine Mercy church amid a barrage of armed attacks, is embraced by a relative, after he was transporte­d to the Cathedral in Managua, Nicaragua.

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