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Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega rejects demands he step down Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega rejects demands to step down
(about 11 hours later)
Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega has refused to bow to protesters' demands that he stand down.Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega has refused to bow to protesters' demands that he stand down.
He said the deaths of about 300 people during three months of protests were caused by paramilitary groups, during an interview with the US news channel Fox News. He said the deaths of about 300 people during three months of protests were caused by paramilitary groups, during an interview with US news channel Fox.
He denied the government had financed the groups and said they were funded by opposition MPs and drug cartels. He said the groups behind the violence were funded by opposition MPs and drug cartels but provided no evidence of the alleged links.
Mr Ortega said they had attacked the police during the protests. Human rights groups say armed groups loyal to the state are responsible.
He insisted he would continue in office until elections in 2021, defying calls for his resignation. What did President Ortega say?
"To move up the elections would create instability, insecurity and make things worse," the president said. Speaking following scathing international criticism of his government's actions during the anti-government protests, President Ortega went on the offensive, blaming the opposition for the turmoil his country has been experiencing.
Daniel Ortega, who was president of Nicaragua between 1979 and 1990 and returned to power in 2007, also denied the government had ordered hospitals not to treat the wounds of anti-government protestors. He also ruled out holding early elections, the main compromise mediators had suggested at talks between the two sides. Below we take a closer look at what he told Fox News and how it compares to what others both inside and outside Nicaragua are saying.
He also rejected reports of attacks on Roman Catholic priests, who he said should continue to mediate in stalled peace talks between the protesters and the government. On the anti-government protests:
He qualified the anti-government protests as "terrorism" designed to end his government. President Ortega said: "It's been a week now that turmoil has stopped. Matters are becoming more normal in the country and there have been some demonstrations both against and in favour of the government."
Calm was beginning to return this week, he said, with both pro and anti-government protests taking place peacefully. On Monday there were rival demonstrations by both supporters and opponents of President Ortega.
President Ortega also accused the US Congress, which is due to pass a motion of censure against Nicaragua this week, of trying to hurt his country's image. Thousands of students waving flags of the governing Sandinista party gathered in the capital, Managua, to show their continued backing for the president, and accused anti-government groups of being "terrorists".
"It has been a campaign of lies, terrible lies to try to destroy the image of Nicaragua and its government." He said. Thousands of anti-government students also gathered in the capital and other cities holding up notebooks and pens shouting they were "not terrorists but students".
He made a direct appeal to US President Donald Trump: "We are a small country, with a fragile economy but we deserve respect." While no deaths were reported at the marches and recent days have seen fewer clashes, it is not clear whether the turmoil has stopped for good.
The Inter-American Commission for Human Rights and the UN's High Commission for Human Rights have both accused the Nicaraguan government of serious human rights violations during three months of anti-government disturbances which began in April over social security reforms. Some protest leaders in opposition hotspots such as the city of Masaya told local media that they were going into hiding after their friends were "kidnapped" by the security forces.
Nicaraguan human rights groups say the authorities are continuing to arrest hundreds of people in a continuing crackdown, and that many of the detainees were seized on suspicion of taking part in the marches. The Nicaraguan Centre for Human Rights (Enid) said on Monday that between 400 and 500 protesters were being held in detention across the country.
On who is behind the violence:
President Ortega said: "There were armed attacks by paramilitary groups against organisations of the state, against the police, against loyal Sandinista families, and then they [the protesters] started blocking the entire country.
"These are groups that obey political organisations, some are members of the Liberal Party... and they've been organising these paramilitary groups for some time now, and they have taken advantage of every small situation to launch attacks."
The presence of paramilitary groups in Nicaragua is not disputed. Protesters have denounced their violent actions from the very first day demonstrations started on 18 April.
However, where President Ortega diverges completely from what international and local human rights groups are saying is who the members of these groups are and whom they are targeting.
"A wide range of human rights violations are being committed including extrajudicial killings, torture, arbitrary detentions, and denying people the right to freedom of expression," a spokesman for the United Nations Office on Human Rights said on 16 July.
"The great majority of violations are by government or armed elements who seem to be working in tandem with them," the spokesman, Rupert Colville, said.
The head of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Paulo Abrao, told Agence France Press news agency on 18 July that "the proportions of those killed (20 police among the 285 dead) and injured (more than 1,800) clearly demonstrate that there has been a combined police and paramilitary operation against those opposing the government".
On the repression of demonstrations:
President Ortega said: "None of the peaceful demonstrations have been attacked. The clashes happened at night when there were no peaceful demonstrations.
"We've had clashes provoked by paramilitary forces organised by people against the government and who've attacked police stations.
"No Nicaraguan has died in any church. Not a single Nicaraguan has died in any church, that's false."
Reports of violent clashes between police and pro-government paramilitary groups on the one hand and anti-government protesters on the other have been widespread, and pictures taken by photographers working for international news agencies suggest these happened in daylight as well as during the night.
A report released on 29 May by Amnesty International was highly critical of the security forces. It documented "the Nicaraguan police's use of lethal weapons, the large numbers of people injured by firearms, the trajectory of shots fired, the concentration of bullet wounds in the head, neck and chest of those killed, and attempts to obstruct justice and cover up the nature of the killings".
Priests have also been tweeting pictures of church walls riddled with bullet holes to show how churches have come under attack.
The most dramatic case was that of a church in Managua which came under siege on 13 July when students took refuge there.
Nicaragua's Bishops' Conference said the Church of Divine Mercy had come under attack by "police and paramilitaries, and one youth was hit by a bullet in the head and has just died".
The Archbishop of Managua, Leopoldo Brenes, later said a second youth had also died during the siege.