Orlando Sentinel

Nicaragua police hunt ‘terrorists’

Students suffer arbitrary arrests, abuse, prison

- By Christophe­r Sherman

MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The 21-year-old agricultur­al economics student, nearly two months pregnant, had hoped to escape Nicaragua with her boyfriend, but a police officer on a motorcycle blocked their path as they were getting into taxis with other students to go to a safe house.

Five police trucks loaded with masked and armed men dressed in civilian garb surrounded them. Uniformed officers began to search the students’ backpacks. One pulled out a blue-and-white Nicaraguan flag.

“These are the terrorists who killed our fellow police,” the officer shouted, using President Daniel Ortega’s term for those who have protested against his government since midApril.

The young couple and their friends joined the ranks of more than 2,000 people arrested in Nicaragua in nearly four months of unrest and official crackdown. At least 400 are thought to still be in jails, prisons and police stations, and some consider them political prisoners, the nongovernm­ental Nicaraguan Human Rights Center says.

The others were held for days or weeks incommunic­ado, brutally interrogat­ed to give up names and threatened with terrorism charges before being released without explanatio­n as Ortega’s government seeks to extinguish the resistance.

“They crushed my fingers, and hit me in the ribs and the stomach,” the pregnant student said. “When I was on the ground, they kicked me.”

The Associated Press separately interviewe­d four of those arrested and released, all of whom are in hiding. They agreed to speak only on condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliatio­n.

“Right now, without exaggerati­ng, Nicaragua is a prison,” said Vilma Nunez, the rights center’s president and a former supreme court vice president under Ortega’s first Sandinista government in 1979.

She called Ortega’s systematic search for those involved in the protests a “human hunt.”

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights recently said its monitoring team in Nicaragua found that detainees were abused, not informed of their rights or any charges, and taken into custody without warrants.

Ortega for weeks denied that paramilita­ry squads and Sandinista youth groups that have clashed with or attacked protesters were working with the police. But when asked in a recent TV interview how demonstrat­ors picked up by masked paramilita­ries ended up in jails, he said: “We have volunteer police who cooperate with the police.”

He has accused protesters and opponents of trying to stage a coup.

The unrest began as protests to social security cuts. After a deadly crackdown, students became the vanguard of a broader push demanding Ortega step down.

The young woman from the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua was among nearly 200 students who dug in at the Managua campus, only to be driven out in mid-July by paramilita­ries under heavy gunfire that killed two people.

A short time later, she and others were taken to a police processing center and lined up with their hands behind their necks.

“I told (one) I was pregnant,” she said. “‘Ah,’ he says, ‘great. We’ve got a pregnant one.’ ”

“One of the paramilita­ries came and punched me in the stomach,” she said. “‘Now we’re going to get it out of you,’ he said. ‘And you’re going to eat it alive.’ ”

The men and women were separated and interrogat­ed individual­ly. The men were stripped naked.

A 20-year-old business administra­tion student said he was punched in the stomach and kicked in the testicles. A police officer ripped out his eyebrow piercing, and a cigarette was put out on a tattoo on his shoulder.

Police and masked civilians asked the same questions in the interrogat­ions: Who were the student leaders? What political party was financing their movement? How much were they being paid?

The pregnant student was taken to a room to stand with her hands spread out on a table. The interrogat­ors began hitting her in the stomach again, she said, and an officer cut off half her toenail.

When she again told them she was pregnant, they told her: “The pain is what we feel fighting for the country. You all just want to see the country destroyed.”

Midway through her five-day incarcerat­ion she started to bleed. She was beaten again.

When the students were released they were warned to stay out of sight.

The next day she went to a hospital, where a doctor told her there was nothing they could do.

“They told me to prepare myself for the news,” she said. “I lost my baby.”

 ?? ARNULFO FRANCO/AP ?? A Nicaraguan university student shows a tattoo a police officer scarred with a lit cigarette while he was held in jail.
ARNULFO FRANCO/AP A Nicaraguan university student shows a tattoo a police officer scarred with a lit cigarette while he was held in jail.

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