Nicaragua scraps pension reform
President under pressure in riot-hit country despite reform U-turn; protesters say demonstration to continue until Ortega and wife ousted; protests claimed 24 lives
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega remained under pressure on Monday despite backing down on a contentious pension reform plan that triggered four days of violence in which 24 people were killed.
The Central American country’s main private business association − an ally of Ortega during his 11 years in power − said they it go ahead with an anti-government march on Monday.
Students who led the protests vowed to keep up their demonstrations until the 72-year-old former Sandinista rebel Ortega and his wife and vice-president Rosario Murillo are ousted.
On Sunday, Ortega sought to placate popular fury, announcing he was revoking the pension reform plan that would have increased both employer and employee contributions and reduced beneits, in an Imf-backed bid to cap a rising $76 million deicit at the Nicaraguan Social Security Institute (INSS).
The increases were the spark that ignited student protests last Wednesday that soon spread to other sectors of Nicaraguan society.
“The protests are no longer just for the INSS, it is against a government that denies us freedom of expression, freedom of the press and to demonstrate peacefully,” 26-year-old political science student Clifford Ramirez told reporters.
“We believe there is no longer space for dialogue,” he added.
Student protesters won support in neighbourhoods where residents came out to bang kitchen pots, and from workers and retirees angered by government corruption and the deterioration in their living conditions.
The protests intensiied over the weekend as demonstrators erected barricades of burning tires in the streets of the capital Managua, while mobs ransacked shops in various parts of the city.
Ortega responded with a crackdown that saw the army deployed, independent media muzzled, journalists assaulted and pro-government demonstrators mobilized to counter the protests.
Protesters said the security forces used live ire against them.
A doctor treating those wounded in the clashes, Eyel Almanza, said in an interview that police oficers were resorting to deadly force.
“The wounds suffered by students have been from irearms,” he said.
Ortega compared the protesters to gang members who spread terror in Nicaragua’s Latin American neighbours.
The unexpected wave of violence in an otherwise relatively tightly controlled country caused international outrage.
The United States denounced the “excessive force used by police and others,” urging Ortega’s government to allow journalists to work freely.
The European Union called the violence “unacceptable.”
“We demand that the Nicaraguan government cease the brutal attacks against the demonstrators and the civilian population,” the Nicaraguan Centre for Human Rights said in a joint statement with the International Federation for Human Rights.
Both organisations conirmed that 25 people were killed in the protests, including minors, police oficers and members of the Sandinista Youth, mobilized to support the government.
On Saturday, a journalist was shot dead while reporting on the chaos in the Caribbean city of Blueields.
Before his U-turn late Sunday, Ortega had agreed to hold talks with the private sector, only to be rebuffed by business leaders who said there could be no dialogue unless his government “immediately ceases police repression.” Ramirez said the deaths and censorship during the protests had ended the possibility of resolving the crisis through talks.