Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega blamed criminals, Catholic bishops and the US for a wave of unrest he has violently sought to extinguish.
The protesters, financed by the “North American empire” and domestic business chiefs, had been conspiring to mount a “coup d’etat” in the Central American nation, Ortega claimed to a crowd of thousands of supporters in Managua.
Catholic bishops who had attempted to mediate dialogue between him and the opposition were also “behaving like coup plotters,” he said, asserting that some churches had caches of weapons and served as rebel bases.
Standing on a stage alongside the Cuban and Venezuelan foreign ministers and his wife Rosario Murillo, who is also his vice president, Ortega spoke as if his security forces had finished with the public dissent after armed offensives launched over the past week.
“It has been a painful battle. Painful because we have confronted an armed conspiracy financed by internal forces we know and external forces,” he said.
The three months of unrest in what used to be one of Latin America’s safest countries has seen more than 280 people killed, most of them protesting youths, according to rights groups.
Ortega made no mention of those deaths, instead rattling off a list of two dozen police officers he said were killed by “terrorists.”
But it was not clear that police and paramilitary attacks on university students at the forefront of the protests and on the city of Masaya, which had been a hotbed of opposition, had ended the deep resentment of Ortega.
“We’re sick of the government. How can they do that to the students?” said one 17-year-old, Camila Orozco, sitting by a gas station in the capital. “This old man should go to hell. Here we don’t want to see him.”
“Before, we celebrated with joy. But this government has massacred, murdered and arrested a lot of people,” said a taxi driver and former soldier who gave his name as Gerardo.
The bloodshed has caused Ortega to lose vital support from the private business sector, whose cooperation had for years allowed him to reign with relative stability.
“Nicaragua will not be a viable country for peace and development as long as the current regime stays in place,” the influential CACIF business group said on Thursday, also demanding Ortega leave power.
International condemnation has stepped up, with the US and the Organisation of American States calling for an end to the crackdown and backing activist demands for early elections in the poor Central American country.
The United Nations’ human rights office says Ortega’s regime has carried out killings, torture and arbitrary detentions. The Nicaraguan government, though, dismisses the claims as warped by antagonistic media.
Murillo said government forces were victorious against “diabolical forces” trying to sabotage the country. But Managua’s auxiliary bishop Silvio Jose Baez, a prominent voice raised against Ortega and Murillo, tweeted: “A state cannot proclaim itself victorious over its own people that it has oppressed and massacred.”
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