Bangkok Post

Protests over pension turn deadly in Nicaragua

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>> MANAGUA: Violent protests against a proposed change to Nicaragua’s pension system have left at least 10 people dead over two days, the government reported on Friday.

In the biggest protests in President Daniel Ortega’s 11 years in office in this poor Central American country, people are angry over the plan because workers and employers would have to chip in more toward the retirement system.

The government is willing to hold a dialogue and Mr Ortega will issue a formal call on Saturday, Vice-President Rosario Murillo said, adding: “At least 10 compatriot­s have died”.

Demonstrat­ions rocked the capital Managua and nearby cities for a third day.

The new l aw, besides i ncreasing employer and employee contributi­ons, would cut the overall pension amount by five percent.

“We are against these reforms, which means we’re against this government taking from the pockets of Nicaraguan­s,” said Juan Bautista.

He said riot police brutally attacked demonstrat­ors like him because “the dictator does not like people to protest”.

A woman nearby shouted: “The people are tired of this repression!”

Students from Polytechni­c University have been holed up on their campus since Thursday evading police. Other students took refuge in nearby buildings or residences.

In Las Colinas, south of the capital, demonstrat­ors raised small barricades and with their hands raised asked the riot police not to target them.

Four independen­t television outlets were taken off the air after they broadcast the demonstrat­ions on Thursday, and two were still blocked on Friday.

Ms Murillo compared the protesters to “vampires demanding blood to feed their political agenda”.

The opposition said more than 20 people were wounded while the writers group Pen Nicaragua said that at least 11 journalist­s were attacked while covering the demonstrat­ions.

“We call on the Nicaraguan authoritie­s to act to prevent further attacks on demonstrat­ors and on the media,” said Liz Throssell, spokeswoma­n for the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights”.

She urged the government to let people “exercise their right to freedom of expression and to peaceful assembly and associatio­n”, and urged protesters to demonstrat­e “peacefully”.

She also said demonstrat­ors were attacked by government supporters in the city of Masaya.

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