Miami Herald

Former political prisoners fear for families left behind

- BY ANTONIO MARIA DELGADO adelgado@elnuevoher­ald.com Antonio Maria Delgado: 305-376-2180, @DelgadoAnt­onioM

Six days after they were kicked out of their country, some of the 222 Nicaraguan political prisoners freed last week said they were grateful for the warm welcome they have received in the U.S. but expressed concern for their families who are in the Central American country and are targets of the Daniel Ortega regime.

Speaking at a press conference held by MiamiDade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava on Wednesday, a group of the former political prisoners said Ortega has no intention of ending the crackdown on his opponents even after freeing most of the estimated 245 political prisoners he had imprisoned.

“They are building more maximum-security prisons, near to the one in which we were held,” said Victor Manuel Sosa Herrera, who had been sentenced to 10 years for aiding students who protested against the regime in 2018. “My family is under siege in Nicaragua by the genocidal National Guard that arrives every morning to intimidate” them.

Sosa was sentenced under trumped-up drug charges. His real crime

was to provide food and other forms of assistance to protesters, a decision that he made after seeing the effects of the regime’s violent crackdown. “He saw when some kids were struck down and that outraged him,” one of his relatives said in a radio interview in 2021. “He saw how the kids were shot, and it was then that he decided to help the students with food.”

Declaring them traitors to the fatherland, Ortega unexpected­ly freed the 222 political prisoners last Thursday and sent them into exile in the United States. Among them were a number of presidenti­al hopefuls whom he arrested in 2021 so they couldn’t run against him that year.

The prisoners had been found guilty by the Managua Court of Appeals of having committed a number of crimes, including plotting against the Nicaraguan state and the Nicaraguan people. Their citizenshi­ps were revoked and they were barred from ever holding public office.

Their release was hailed as a positive sign by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who said that it could become a step to the improvemen­t of relations between Washington and Managua.

“The release of these individual­s, one of whom is a U.S. citizen, by the government of Nicaragua marks a constructi­ve step towards addressing human rights abuses in the country and opens the door to further dialogue between the United States and Nicaragua regarding issues of concern,” Blinken said last week.

But the former political prisoners said they are not quite sure that the Ortega regime is planning to change its course.

Claiming that the persecutio­n of her family in Nicaragua is intense, former political prisoner Maria José Martinez said one of her priorities is finding an organizati­on that could help her get her family out.

Her loved ones, she said, have been turned into pariahs inside Nicaragua and were stripped of their citizenshi­p just as she was.

“They were erased from the records, they no longer exist. I have two children and my husband, which are being heavily persecuted,” she said.

Former political prisoner Yubrank Suazo thanked Levine Cava and other local leaders for the assistance they are providing.

He said “what has been most difficult for many of us is having to leave our homeland, where our family is. There is where our hearts have remained.”

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Former political prisoner Victor Manuel Sosa Herrera raises the Nicaraguan flag with the inverted national seal in the center as a sign of protest at the Stephen P. Clark Government Center in downtown Miami on Wednesday.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Former political prisoner Victor Manuel Sosa Herrera raises the Nicaraguan flag with the inverted national seal in the center as a sign of protest at the Stephen P. Clark Government Center in downtown Miami on Wednesday.
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Maria José Martinez, center, receives applause from Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava and others.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Maria José Martinez, center, receives applause from Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava and others.

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