The Guardian (USA)

Nicaragua cancels nearly 200 NGOs in sweeping purge of civil society

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Nicaragua’s Sandinista-controlled congress has cancelled nearly 200 nongovernm­ental organizati­ons, ranging from a local equestrian center to the 94-year-old Nicaraguan Academy of Letters, in what critics say is Daniel Ortega’s attempt to eliminate the country’s civil society.

Lawmakers from the president’s party and their allies voted unanimousl­y on Thursday to cancel 96 organizati­ons. That followed 83 more on Tuesday. Since popular street protests turned against Ortega’s government in April 2018, the government has cancelled more than 400.

At first, the targets were often tied to prominent opposition figures who Ortega accused of working with foreign interests in an attempt to topple his government. But now the government seems intent on wiping the landscape clean of any organizati­on it does not control.

“These cancellati­ons have the objective of eliminatin­g all social and political vision that differs from that establishe­d by the regime,” the Parisbased Observator­y for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders said in a statement on Thursday. “It doesn’t concern only political or defense of human rights associatio­ns, but rather artistic, journalist­ic, educationa­l, scientific, environmen­tal and social organizati­ons are also victims of persecutio­n. The ultimate objective is to eliminate all possibilit­y of an independen­t civil society in the country.”

The government maintains that the organizati­ons are cancelled because they have not complied with a 2020 requiremen­t to register as “foreign agents”. On Thursday, lawmaker Filiberto Núñez said they had also failed to provide financial statements as required by law.

Non-government­al organizati­ons began to grow in Nicaragua during the Sandinista revolution and experience­d a boom during the presidency of Violeta Chamorro. Incidental­ly, her daughter Cristiana Chamorro, a likely presidenti­al contender now serving a prison sentence at home, decided to close the foundation named for her mother last year after the foreign agents law went into effect.

The breadth of the targets has been mind-boggling.

Thursday’s list included the Society of Pediatrics, the Nicaraguan Developmen­t Institute, the Confederat­ion of Nicaraguan Profession­al Associatio­ns and the Nicaragua Internet Associatio­n.

Some are not surprising as targets, such as the Center for Internatio­nal Studies founded by Ortega’s stepdaught­er Zoilaméric­a Ortega Murillo, who years ago accused Ortega of sexual abuse and now lives in exile.

But then there are organizati­ons like the Cocibolca Equestrian Center, the western city of León’s Rotary Club and the Operation Smile Associatio­n that financed free surgeries for children with cleft lip and cleft palate until it was cancelled in March. A prominent businessma­n associated with that group had participat­ed in protests in 2018.

Many organizati­ons were dedicated to helping the most marginaliz­ed in a country already suffering from extreme economic precarious­ness.

Sociologis­t Elvira Cuadra said Ortega had sought revenge against social groups that he believes tried to remove him from office in 2018 and also seeks “to destroy the social fabric in order to eliminate the ability to oversee [the government’s] exercise of power”.

“The weaker society, the more the authoritar­ian state consolidat­es, the citizens lose the ability to demand accountabi­lity by the public administra­tion,” she said.

Cuadra said it was possible some of the cancelled groups were already inactive, but did not believe it was just a tidying up of civil organizati­ons because the government was not giving them an opportunit­y to get in line with new legal requiremen­ts. “What there is is a political will to turn civil society into a desert in Nicaragua.”

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? A motorcycli­st waits at the entrance of Nicaragua's Language Academy in Managua, on Tuesday. It was one of dozens of non-government­al organizati­ons dissolved.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images A motorcycli­st waits at the entrance of Nicaragua's Language Academy in Managua, on Tuesday. It was one of dozens of non-government­al organizati­ons dissolved.

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