Bangkok Post

End paramilita­ry groups, brother of Nicaragua’s Ortega says

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>> MANAGUA: Humberto Ortega, the ex-head of Nicaragua’s military, urged his brother President Daniel Ortega in a TV interview to disband the pro-Sandinista paramilita­ry forces blamed for deadly violence in months of unrest.

“If the government has a profound sense of responsibi­lity, in the first place it should end the presence of these armed people,” who act “as if they were a military or police authority”, Mr Ortega said in a late Friday interview on the CNN En Espanol program, Con Camilo.

More than 300 people have been killed in Nicaragua in more than three months of unrest against Daniel Ortega’s administra­tion. The protests have been brutally countered by police and armed pro-government paramilita­ries.

Rights groups say more than 2,000 people have been wounded since the clashes erupted in mid-April.

Mr Ortega blamed the armed irregular forces for many of the protester deaths.

“We cannot accept the existence of parapolice or paramilita­ry forces,” he told CNN, complainin­g that the paramilita­ries “operate openly next to national police”.

Mr Ortega, 71, fought alongside his brother Daniel, 72, in the 1979 Sandinista revolution that toppled dictator Anastasio Somoza.

He was head of Nicaragua’s military until the Sandinista­s lost power in the 1990 election. Since then he has focused on business.

Humberto’s brother Daniel was re-elected in 2007 and has remained in power ever since then. However, many of Daniel Ortega’s Sandinista comrades from the 1979 revolution no longer support the president.

Mr Ortega blamed the government for the “indiscrimi­nate repression” of protesters but refused to directly blame his brother.

He says that he has a “very respectful and fraternal” relationsh­ip with the president, but that they do not share any direct communicat­ion.

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