Nicaragua Violence Officially Condemned by the White House

CSPAN

The United States strongly condemns the ongoing violence in Nicaragua and human rights abuses committed by the Ortega regime in response to protests. After years of fraudulent elections and the regime’s manipulation of Nicaraguan law – as well as the suppression of civil society, opposition parties, and independent media – the Nicaraguan people have taken to the streets to call for democratic reforms. These demands have been met with indiscriminate violence, with more than 350 dead, thousands injured, and hundreds of citizens falsely labeled “coup-mongers” and “terrorists” who have been jailed, tortured, or who have gone missing. President Ortega and Vice President Murillo are ultimately responsible for the pro-government parapolice that have brutalized their own people.

The United States stands with the people of Nicaragua, including members of the Sandinista party, who are calling for democratic reforms and an end to the violence. Free, fair, and transparent elections are the only avenue toward restoring democracy in Nicaragua. We support the Catholic Church-led National Dialogue process for good faith negotiations.

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The Trump Administration has designated three Nicaraguan officials – Francisco Diaz, Fidel Moreno, and Francisco Lopez – under the Global Magnitsky Act for human rights abuses and corruption. Through these sanctions, the United States is demonstrating that it will hold Ortega regime officials who authorize violence and abuses or who steal from the Nicaraguan people responsible for their actions. These are a start, not an end, of potential sanctions.

The United States is revoking or restricting visas of Nicaraguan officials and their families when those officials have been responsible for police violence against protesters and municipal authorities, when they have supported pro-government parapolice violence, or when they have prevented victims from receiving care.

The Trump Administration has secured the return of vehicles donated to the Nicaraguan National Police that have been used to violently suppress peaceful protests, and it has cut off further sales and donations of equipment that Ortega’s security forces might misuse.

The United States has announced an additional $1.5 million in aid to continue support for freedom and democracy in Nicaragua, providing a critical lifeline for civil society, human rights organizations, and independent media currently under threat from the Ortega regime.

We are engaging with regional partners and have issued a declaration of support for the people of Nicaragua at the Organization of American States (OAS) General Assembly and passed a resolution in the OAS condemning the violence, supporting the work of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to investigate the violence and promoting early elections.

Senior Administration officials, including Vice President Pence, Secretary Pompeo, and Ambassador Haley, have highlighted human rights abuses in Nicaragua and publicly demanded that the Ortega regime immediately end the state-sanctioned violence perpetrated by police and parapolice forces. The United States will continue to monitor the situation in Nicaragua closely and work with the international community to hold those responsible for the violence to account.

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ernaldo
ernaldo
5 years ago

The feds better get OUR elections under control as well, if the right engages the already off the reservation leftist filth in America over their election cheating and riots over losing, Nicaragua’s “violence” will look more like a pie throwing contest.

Colonialgirl
Colonialgirl
5 years ago

The “Sandinistas” ARE NOT great of a group either; LOOK UP THIER histiry and who they are named for.

Colonialgirl
Colonialgirl
5 years ago

Quote} “In 1961, the Sandinista National Liberation Front (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, or Sandinistas) was founded by Silvio Mayorga, Tomás Borge, and Carlos Fonseca. The group took its name from Augusto Cesár Sandino, who led a Liberal peasant army against the government of U.S.-backed Adolfo Díaz and the subsequent Nicaraguan government in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Inspired by Fidel Castro’s and Che Guevarra’s Cuban Revolution, the group sought to be “a political-military organization whose objective is the seizure of political power through the destruction of the bureaucratic and military apparatus of [Somoza’s] dictatorship.”

According to Dennis Gilbert, the first members of the FSLN were nationalistic students who were outraged at conditions in Nicaragua under Somoza. They were also outraged at the United States over what they saw as consistent U.S. intervention in Nicaraguan affairs. He argues that the Sandinistas’ ideology was rooted in Marxism and in a mistaken reading of Sandino as a pseudo-Marxist. (Sandino himself was a populist who sought Nicaraguan independence from U.S. imperialism. While he sought relief for the poor, he did not advocate for a Marxist class struggle.)
However, the Sandinistas were heavily influenced by Marixst-Leninist teachings, as the party leaders themselves sometimes admitted, but they interpreted these ideas in the context of their view of Nicaragua’s history. Specifically, they thought of themselves as a Leninist vanguard party, a group of “professional revolutionaries” that would unite the Nicaraguan workers and peasants to destroy the “present system of capitalist exploitation and oppression” run by the Somoza dynasty and supported by the United States. After they had rid Nicaragua of those who were resistant to change, the FSLN would lead Nicaragua toward socialism, at least in a broad sense; as Gilbert notes, the Sandinistas did not all agree on what socialism actually meant. “{Quote

Chip Spradley
Chip Spradley
5 years ago

Thank you President Trump for all your efforts. on this subject and many others.

willis forster
willis forster
5 years ago

Condemnation of the violence is not an endorsement of the present government.

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