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To Despite multiple denunciations of the civilian population and human rights groups, Daniel Ortega denied, in an interview with Chavez Telesur TV, the government's funding of groups violent to persecute the people of his country, and accused "organized, armed gangs, sponsored by law and intelligence agencies that come from US agencies."
"If we are going to talk about paramilitaries here, the only groups are from the right.We have armed forces, the army, the police, which are constitutional.And, at the same time, there is a clandestine force army that has become the instrument of the death of the right-wing coup, "said the Nicaraguan president, who faces the biggest political crisis since the decade of the 80s. [19659004Ortegaaccusedthe"representativesoftheUnitedStatesandeconomicgroups"ofNicaraguaofconsideringthattheydonotacceptthattheSandinistaNationalFrontforLiberation(FSLN)wontheelections
"The poison is put by American interventionism in Nicaragua, that is the root of the problem.If the United States respected the country, they would respect what the Nicaraguans decided, whatever be the ideology, they would respect an agreement between the country, the workers and the businessmen, the entrepreneurs would work with Nicaragua. " here we will talk about paramilitaries, the only ones are the groups of right. We have armed forces, army, police, which are constitutional . And, at the same time, there is an armed clandestine force that has become the instrument of death "
Daniel Ortega
President of Nicaragua
Ortega ignored, once again, the death of 39, at least 306 civilians in anti-government demonstrations, according to data released by local human rights activists, since the government of Nicaragua only counts the killing of less than 60 people. [19659004] Yesterday, the demonstrations reached their hundredth day and there seems to be no progress in achieving the objectives.The students and the Church, protagonists of the demonstrations, demanded that the regime of Daniel Ortega make to advance the elections of 2021 to 2019 to be able to renew the powers.
However, the president of the Central American nation refuses to resign: "Our electoral period ends with the elections of 2021, when we will have our next Ines Elections. "Abandoning would create" instability, insecurity and make matters worse, "he said
- El Dato: The authoritarian response of the government of Daniel Ortega to the protests triggered a national movement demanding the resignation of the president. Tactics of repression
The Ortega regime killed at least 306 protesters. The mechanisms of violence are:
- Police, armed elements and other violent groups, carrying out so-called "clean-up operations" in different parts of the country, forcibly removing barricades erected by the demonstrators and
- The paramilitaries, faithful to the government, act "with the express or tacit support and in coordination with the police and the other authorities of the State", denounces the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner to human rights. Humans
- Agreement with a UN report, police and authorities in Nicaragua imprison people without subjecting them to a judicial process and torturing them
Brazilian murdered had bullets in the thorax
The forensic authorities reported yesterday that the Brazilian student Rayneia Lima died in Nicaragua due to gunshot wounds in the chest and abdomen, after an attack by supposedly apolicías groups, declared an official source.
"It was determined that the cause of death was a bullet wound to the thorax and the abdomen," says the medical report, granted by the Institute of Forensic Medicine (IDM). ) who announced that the body of Lima would be delivered to the Brazilian Embbady in Managua
Lima, 31, lived in Nicaragua for six years, where he was in the final year of medicine at the American University (UAM, private)
The Brazilian student died after the vehicle she was driving was hit by bullets Monday night in the southwestern sector of Managua. According to witnesses, para-policemen fired on his car
The area where he died is "the domain of paramilitary groups," said Gonzalo Carrión, legal director of the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights ( Cenidh). Latest posts by Martha Cotoret (View all)