San Diego Union-Tribune

DEPORTED DETAINEES DESCRIBE CONDITIONS IN PRISONS

Nicaraguan­s held by Ortega government detail abuse, threats

- BY GISELA SALOMON Salomon writes for The Associated Press.

Constant fear. Screams and the sounds of torture. Darkness in a small cell with just a hole in the floor for a toilet.

Opposition prisoners from Nicaragua are recounting the months — and sometimes years — they spent in the notorious prisons run by the regime of President Daniel Ortega.

“Those were three terrible years. There were threats, and I thought they might kill us at any moment,” recalled Victor Manuel Sosa Herrera, who was held in three separate prisons. He said water was in short supply, and what little food there was, was often rotten beans.

Sosa Herrera was among 222 opposition figures recently released by Ortega, as had long been sought by his critics. However, Ortega’s government went a few steps further, deporting them and saying their Nicaraguan citizenshi­p would be revoked and their property confiscate­d — drawing fire as an example of banishment, in violation of internatio­nal norms.

On Feb. 9, they were flown to the U.S., where they have begun telling stories of the harsh conditions in prison.

Sosa Herrera, 60, ran a grain and feed business in the northern Nicaragua city of Matagalpa when he was arrested in early 2020 and sentenced to 110 years in prison for treason and destabiliz­ing the government.

He says he wasn’t an activist in the massive 2018 protests that shook Ortega’s government, but suspects he was arrested for his refusal to join government paramilita­ry squads that violently put down the protests.

At one prison, the Modelo penitentia­ry, he was locked up alone in a sunless cell. He says that another prisoner in a similar cell believed he had gone blind from years of living in the dark. At night, he said, he could hear other prisoners being tortured.

“The guards put them into handcuffs and shackles, and then beat them and dragged them,” Sosa Herrera recalled. “We heard them screaming.”

The Nicaraguan government did not respond to requests for comment on the prisoners’ accounts. Ortega has maintained that his imprisoned opponents and others were behind 2018 street protests that he claims were a foreign plot to overthrow him.

Another prisoner who asked not to be identified for fear of reprisals against her family, said she still doesn’t know why riot police burst into her home in November 2021, and pulled her away from her family as they were about to sit down to dinner.

A perfume distributo­r, the 43-year-old woman said she wasn’t a political activist. But she was sentenced to 10 years in prison after prosecutor­s accused her of plotting to burn ballot boxes and receiving funds from abroad.

She spent 15 months locked in a cell with nine other female inmates, all of them except her in for homicide or drug traffickin­g. The guards would subject the opposition prisoners to psychologi­cal abuse, she said.

Indeed, some prisoners didn’t make it out.

Hugo Torres, a former Sandinista guerrilla leader who once led a raid that helped free then-rebel Ortega from prison in the 1970s but who later broke with Ortega, died while awaiting trial. He was 73.

Torres was among opposition figures arrested in 2021 as Ortega looked to clear the field ahead of presidenti­al elections in November of that year. Security forces arrested seven potential presidenti­al contenders and Ortega coasted to a fourth consecutiv­e term in elections that the U.S. and other countries termed a farce.

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