The Guardian (USA)

Nicaragua oppression is ‘tantamount to crimes against humanity’, says report

- AP in Mexico City

UN-backed human rights experts have accused Nicaragua’s government of systematic human rights abuses “tantamount to crimes against humanity”, implicatin­g a range of high-ranking officials in the government of President Daniel Ortega.

The allegation­s follow an investigat­ion into the country’s expanding crackdown on political dissent. The Ortega government has gone after opponents for years, but it hit a turning point with mass protests against the government in 2018 that resulted in violent repression by authoritie­s.

In the past year, repression has expanded to large swaths of society with a focus on “incapacita­ting any kind of opposition in the long term”, according to the independen­t group of UN experts investigat­ing the issue since March 2022.

The experts do not speak for the world body, but work under a mandate from the human rights council.

“Serious systematic human rights violations, tantamount to crimes against humanity, continue to be perpetrate­d by the Nicaraguan government for political reasons,” the group said in a statement.

Jan Simon, an expert who headed the investigat­ion, said at a news conference on Thursday in Geneva that the Nicaraguan government’s persecutio­n targets “all forms of opposition, whether real or perceived, both domestical­ly and abroad”.

The state has targeted civilians, including university students, Indigenous and Black Nicaraguan­s, and members of the Catholic church. Children and family members are now targeted simply for being related to people who raise their voices against the government.

Ortega’s government has repeatedly said that the mass demonstrat­ions against it in 2018 constitute­d a failed coup attempt orchestrat­ed by the United States, and typically defends any repression as a crackdown on anti-government plots.

The government did not immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment about the report on Thursday.

The human rights report, which came after hundreds of interviews, implicated a number of high-ranking officials in crackdowns that have firmly consolidat­ed power in the hands of Ortega and his vice-president, Rosario Murillo.

The report says Gustavo Porras, the head of the country’s national assembly, pushes through legislatio­n to facilitate repression. It says Marvin Aguilar García, the head of the supreme court, takes direct orders from Ortega’s government, and commands lowerlevel judges to fall in line. Meanwhile, the office of country’s chief prosecutor,

Ana Julia Guido Ochoa, fabricates evidence against real or perceived opponents, the report says.

The experts also cite high-ranking officials in the country’s interior ministry, the government­al body regulating migration and the body regulating nongovernm­ental organizati­ons.

Simon said the government’s “centraliza­tion of power not only ensures impunity for perpetrato­rs, but also undermines efforts towards accountabi­lity”.

“The government has ensured that it remains in an increasing­ly solid bubble to perpetuate itself in power and annihilate anyone attempting to break that bubble,” he said.

ln December, police charged the director of the Miss Nicaragua pageant of a “beauty queen coup” plot, saying she rigged the competitio­n against progovernm­ent beauty queens. In February, the government shut down yet another round of social groups, including the country’s scouting organizati­on and a Rotary Club chapter.

The report says the crackdown has expanded past Nicaragua’s borders to the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled government repression, largely landing in the United States and Costa Rica. Hundreds of Nicaraguan­s have been stripped of their citizenshi­p and left stateless, unable to access fundamenta­l rights.

The UN report urges the Ortega government to release “arbitraril­y” detained Nicaraguan­s and calls on global leaders to expand sanctions on “individual­s and institutio­ns involved in human rights violations”.

 ?? ?? A woman spray-paints ‘Freedom for political prisoners’ in Managua, Nicaragua, in 2020. Photograph: Inti Ocón/AFP/Getty Images
A woman spray-paints ‘Freedom for political prisoners’ in Managua, Nicaragua, in 2020. Photograph: Inti Ocón/AFP/Getty Images

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