Stabroek News

Nicaragua is assaulting freedom of expression, journalist says

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MANAGUA, (Reuters) - An influentia­l Nicaraguan journalist critical of the country’s government said on Monday that local journalism was living its worst moment under repression by President Daniel Ortega.

In recent days, Ortega’s government shut down a broadcaste­r, arrested two reporters on terrorism and hate-incitement charges, while a judge ordered the arrest of three more and others fled the country in fear.

“They are making up crimes. They are crimes that don’t exist. In essence they are criminaliz­ing the work of the journalist,” Carlos Fernando Chamorro, one of Nicaragua’s most famous journalist­s, said in an interview.

Chamorro has been producing online outlet Confidenci­al almost in hiding since police 10 days ago raided his offices and took equipment used to produce two television programs and two digital media outlets. “It’s a total assault against the right to freedom of expression,” said Chamorro, who is the son of former President Violeta Barrios and Pedro Joaquín Chamorro, a journalist murdered when he ran a major newspaper critical of dictator Anastasio Somoza in the 1970s.

Representa­tives from Ortega’s government did not respond to a request for comment. Ortega’s administra­tion has repeatedly said there is freedom of expression in the country.

Since April, Nicaragua has been experienci­ng one of its worst crises since a civil war in the 1980s. Protests raged for months before a government clampdown reined them in.

More than 300 people have been killed and more than 500 are incarcerat­ed, according to the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights, one of the groups the government has blackliste­d. Human rights groups say four radio stations and a TV station have closed, while dozens of journalist­s have been beaten and threatened.

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