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Nicaragua had two and a half months of protests against the government of Daniel Ortega and the violent repression of the police and military forces that left nearly 300 dead and more than 2,500 wounded.
This violent socio-political crisis in Nicaragua This is due to the "unleashing of dark forces that sow terror and death" in the country, said Bishop Silvio Báez Sunday at a homily at the cathedral Metropolitan of Managua. Báez warned that the crisis has already left "nearly 300 Nicaraguans who did not die when they had to die, but died when others decided to kill him."
Yesterday, Sunday in Nicaragua 75 days of socio-political crisis since the 1980s, with Ortega also as president, which left 285 dead and more than 2,500 wounded, according to the latest report presented by the Nicaraguan Association of Rights of the man (ANPDH) last Tuesday.
Protests against Ortega and His Wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, began on April 18 for failed social security reforms and became a demand for the president's resignation, after eleven years in power, with charges of abuse and corruption in his against
Caravans
Two dead and 11 wounded left the fire on Saturday when thousands of Nicaraguans marched in Managua against President Ortega, and in memory of miners who are among the 285 who died in two and a half months of government repression.
One of the victims is a 23-year-old street vendor who died when a group that separated from the march was shot dead. pbadage through a property occupied by hooded and heavily armed civilians, southwest of Managua
The other deceased is a man who helped entrenched students at the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN) , where a barricade was attacked with bullets According to human rights groups, a team of AFP in the so-called "Flower March" could see when the young man, who was selling cbadettes to protesters, fell with the impact of a bullet in the head. A few hours later, he died at the hospital
The march, called by the Civic Alliance for Justice and Democracy – civil society, ended at the roundabout Jean Paul Génie, but those who left the road wanted to support UNAN Students
With flowers and flags, defying fear, thousands of Nicaraguans attended the "Flower March" in Managua and in other cities like León, Masaya and Granada to seek justice for the number of miners killed in the wave of violence
This was the first big march since the big demonstration on May 30th on the occasion of Mother's Day, which made 18 dead due to an attack by the police, parapolices and paramilitaries. The death of children who shocked the country is that of a five-month-old baby, burned in the fire at home, and another one-year-old boy who s' is shot in the head on a street in Managua. The protesters are demanding the resignation of Ortega, a 72-year-old left-wing guerrilla that took power with the popular uprising that overthrew dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979 and who returned to the government through the polls. in 2007. accused of establishing, with his wife and vice president Rosario Murillo, nepotism, a dictatorship and trigger a brutal repression.
The march was suspended a week ago by the violent incursion of pro-government forces in several cities and the Civic Alliance. reprogrammed by taking advantage of the presence of experts from the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).
Both agencies asked the government to guarantee the right to freedom of expression, badembly and demonstration.
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