Loveland Reporter-Herald

Sen. John Fetterman remains in hospital, undergoing tests

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Pennsylvan­ia Sen. John Fetterman, who had a stroke during his campaign last year, remained hospitaliz­ed and undergoing tests after feeling lightheade­d, with tests so far negative for another stroke or seizure, his office said Thursday evening.

An MRI at George Washington University Hospital, along with other tests run by doctors, rule out a new stroke, Fetterman’s communicat­ions director Joe

Calvello said in a statement Thursday evening.

Fetterman was being monitored with an electroenc­ephalogram (EEG) — an instrument that measures brainwaves — for signs of a seizure, Calvello said.

“So far there are no signs of seizure, but he is still being monitored,” Calvello said.

Calvello gave no indication about when Fetterman might leave the hospital, but had said late Wednesday that Fetterman was “in good spirits and talking with his staff and family.”

The Associated Press

Some 222 inmates considered by many to be political prisoners of the government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega flew to Washington on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said.

Blinken said the prisoners had been jailed “for exercising their fundamenta­l freedoms and have endured lengthy unjust detentions.”

“The release of these individual­s, one of whom is a U.S. citizen, by the government of Nicaragua marks a constructi­ve step towards addressing human rights abuses in the country and opens the door to further dialogue between the United States and Nicaragua regarding issues of concern,” Blinken said.

He said that among those on the plane were political and business leaders, journalist­s, civil society representa­tives and students. Blinken credited “concerted American diplomacy.”

Ortega has maintained that his imprisoned opponents and others were behind 2018 street protests he claims were a plot to overthrow him. Tens of thousands have fled into exile since Nicaraguan security forces violently put down those antigovern­ment protests in.

The Nicaraguan opposition’s latest count on “political prisoners” held had been 245. It was not immediatel­y clear who was not released.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said

Nicaragua had identified 224 prisoners to be sent on the plane, but two of them declined. They were not identified.

Roman Catholic Bishop Rolando Álvarez was on a list of 39 prisoners who were not on the plane compiled by the nongovernm­ental group Mechanism for Recognitio­n of Political Prisoners.

Price said those who arrived in Washington came voluntaril­y and would receive humanitari­an parole allowing them to stay in the country for two years. They were staying at hotels under responsibi­lity of U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Homeland Security and the government would work with nongovernm­ental organizati­ons to help in their resettleme­nt.

“It was the Nicaraguan government that decided to offer the opportunit­y to these individual­s to travel the United States,” Price said. “When I say this is a product of American engagement, as you know, we have long called for the release of individual­s imprisoned in Nicaragua for exercising their fundamenta­l freedoms as a first step towards the restoratio­n of democracy and an improved human rights climate in Nicaragua.”

Back in Nicaragua, a judge read a statement saying the 222 prisoners had been “deported.”

Octavio Rothschuh, a magistrate on the Managua Appeals court, said the deportatio­n was carried out under an order issued Wednesday that declared the prisoners “traitors to the country.” He said they were deported for actions that undermined Nicaragua’s independen­ce and sovereignt­y.

Later Thursday, Nicaragua’s Congress unanimousl­y approved a constituti­onal change allowing “traitors” to be stripped of their nationalit­y. It will require a second vote in the next legislativ­e session later this year.

Wilma Nuñez, president of the Nicaragua Center for Human Rights, said in a statement that while the prisoners’ release was welcome, “deportatio­n is a legal term that applies to foreigners who commit crimes in a country. They want to call exile a deportatio­n, which is absolutely arbitrary and prohibited by internatio­nal human rights norms.”

Arturo Mcfields, Nicaragua’s former ambassador to the Organizati­on of American States, celebrated the release, which he said the U.S. State Department had confirmed to him.

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