Colombia President Petro blasts Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, says he perpetuates dictatorship

Aug 28, 2024 | 0 comments

Colombia’s leftist government on Tuesday blasted Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s expulsion of hundreds of prominent critics earlier this month and called for international monitoring and a criminal inquiry, according to a statement by the Colombian foreign ministry.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro

Colombia added that a recent ban on hundreds of non-government humanitarian organizations put Nicaraguans at increased risk. “The population of Nicaragua is one of the most impoverished in the hemisphere and by expelling organizations that provided assistance to the most vulnerable, the government compounds the suffering,” the foreign ministry added.

The criticism by Colombia and its President Gustavo Petro is the latest from the region’s mostly leftist governments, after Chile and Brazil slammed the ejection of more than 200 political prisoners to the United States that Ortega has called criminal mercenaries.

Colombia’s reaction follows an attack by Ortega on Petro for refusing to accept the results of the July 28 Venezuelan election.

“Colombia rejects the dictatorial procedures of those who bring to mind the worst moments of the Anastasio Somoza dictatorship,” Petro said. Ortega’s Sandinista movement toppled the right-wing Somoza family dynasty in 1979, but in recent years many of Ortega’s former rebel allies have been jailed in an unprecedented crackdown on dissent in the Central American country.

Colombia’s government derided Ortega’s expulsion of political prisoners as inhumane and arbitrary. Ortega’s judicial officials also stripped the expelled prisoners of their Nicaraguan citizenship, a move later applied to dozens more critics living abroad. The United States has welcomed Ortega’s release of prisoners a step in favor of human rights.

Colombia’s foreign ministry said that the former prisoners “only crime has been to defend democracy, the right to criticize and universal human rights.”

The South American country’s foreign ministry called on the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit the political prisoners who remain in Nicaragua, as well as for the Hague-based International Criminal Court to evaluate rights violations.

The foreign ministry said it would offer Colombian citizenship to “those who have been abused by Nicaragua’s intolerant government,” joining Spain, Mexico and others that have extended similar offers.

In a Sunday interview, Petro pointed out the “irony” of Ortega’s policies. “The government there came to power promising to provide freedom to the people who suffered under Somoza. Instead, it assumed the same approach as the Somoza doctorship it overthrew, and the people continue to suffer.”
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Sources: Reuters, BBC

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