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The National Police have taken since early Wednesday morning on the main streets and roundabouts of Managua and the road through which it plans to pbad the march called by the National Blue and White Unity (UNAB), which is also supported for the Civic Alliance for Justice and Democracy.
From the Ruben Darío roundabout to the Jean Paul Genie roundabout, hundreds of riot police lie.
At the Ruben Darío roundabout, there are several patrols and a police bus. Officers are located on the north side.
Surveillance is extreme. A caravan of at least 15 trucks filled with policemen runs the street from a roundabout to a roundabout.
Place Alexis Arguello, where the march must end, is occupied by police officers. Dozens of riot police descended from a bus that extended to every corner.
In front of the Teresian school, there is a fairly large number of agents. Some of these forces are kept in front of a service station. In other demonstrations, at this place, several Protestants were lodged.
There is also a strong deployment of policemen in the roundabout of Central America, where the protest is to begin. Virtually the shopping center located in this area is surrounded.
The East Road, another focal point of blue and white protesters, has not escaped the invasion of the police. Dozens are lying in the car parks and others are walking on the docks of this area.
Officers deployed in different parts of the capital are heavily armed.
UNAB's call is to leave the Central American roundabout to go to the Alexis Argüello monument at two o'clock in the afternoon.
The national police on Tuesday issued a statement in which it said it "did not allow" public mobilization and also threatened to imprison those who organized the protest and took part in it.
Moreover, UNAB indicated that it was maintaining the summons to the march, without changing the time or place planned for refocusing itself, also asked the international community, by open letter, to make a decision. call on the Nicaraguan government to "not repress" mobilization and to respect the fundamental and inalienable right of free expression and mobilization ".
The organization recalled that free movement is a right enshrined in Article 54 of Nicaragua's Political Constitution, which "recognizes the right of concentration, demonstration and public mobilization in accordance with the law".
Nicaragua celebrates a year of socio-political crisis that left more than 300 dead, thousands injured, hundreds of prisoners and tens of thousands of exiles facing threats, harbadment and intimidation for having participated in the events.
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