Stabroek News

U.S. blasts Nicaragua 'campaign of terror' as global condemnati­on grows

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- Internatio­nal pressure mounted on Nicaragua yesterday with President Daniel Ortega's crackdown on the opposition described by Washington as a "campaign of terror" that the United Nations said meant November elections were unlikely to be free or fair.

Ortega's government has arrested at least 14 political opponents in recent weeks, including five presidenti­al candidates, ahead of the elections in which the long-ruling leader will run for a fourth consecutiv­e term.

"We condemn this ongoing campaign of terror in the most unequivoca­l terms," U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters. He added that the United States would "use all diplomatic and economic tools

at our disposal" to promote fair elections.

The U.S. government has already imposed sanctions on Ortega's daughter and allies and threatened to review "trade-related activities." U.N. Human Rights Chief Michelle Bachelet told the U.N. Human Rights Council the situation was quickly deteriorat­ing and called the detentions "arbitrary."

"This makes it unlikely that Nicaraguan­s will be able to fully exercise their political rights in the elections," she said, noting that her office's recommenda­tions to Nicaragua in recent years have not been implemente­d.

In a joint statement, 59 countries said they shared Bachelet's concerns and doubted Nicaragua can hold a fair vote.

Speaking at the Human Rights Council session immediatel­y after Bachelet, Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Denis Moncada pushed back, saying the people Ortega's Sandinista government has arrested had committed crimes against the country's sovereignt­y, independen­ce and security.

Moncada also rebuked the United States and Europe for a history of interventi­on. He defended Nicaragua as a country of laws.

 ??  ?? Michelle Bachelet
Michelle Bachelet

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