Since protests over changes to Nicaragua’s social security system began last April, over 300 people have been killed and, at a minimum, 500 people have been incarcerated for their part in calling out Presidential Daniel Ortega’s corrupt self-serving bullshit. There’s a lot to be angry about in the Central American nation.
Non governmental organizations have been doing what they can to bring the wrongs committed by the Nicaraguan government to light. In a bid to shut NGO cake holes, Ortega and his cronies have begun to strip the outfits of their legal status.
From the Associated Press:
Nicaraguan police have raided the offices of five nongovernmental organizations and an independent media outlet, alleging that they participated in seeking the government’s overthrow.
The raids were the latest strong-arm actions taken by the government of President Daniel Ortega. Since popular street protests destabilized his government in April, Ortega has reconsolidated power and methodically pursued perceived enemies.
Police on Thursday forced open doors and carried off documents and computers from the Nicaragua Center for Human Rights, Segovias Leadership Institute, River Foundation, the Center for Communication Research and the Foundation for Municipal Promotion and Development.
The Nicaraguan government and police have had much to say about the raids or the closures of the NGOs–when you’re rolling with a dictatorship, you’re not accountable to anyone…until the people rise up en masse to topple your government, I guess. Oh, and that ‘independent media outlet?’ It was called Confidencial: a joint that produces a website and two news programs.
Claiming that organizations that disagree with the government’s agenda are anti-government. Silencing or attempting to destroy the credibility of independent reportage. It’s all a play from the totalitarian dictatorship playbook that we’ve seen before. Nicaragua’s just a ways further down the road then we are.
Image: by C recordyus (talk · contribs) – Own work based on: Law About Characteristics And Use Of Patriotic Symbols of Nicaragua, Public Domain, Link