BFF-44 UN rights chief ‘extremely alarmed’ as Nicaragua expels rights missions

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UN rights chief ‘extremely alarmed’ as Nicaragua expels rights missions

GENEVA, Dec 21, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The UN rights chief on Friday harshly
criticised Nicaragua’s decision to expel two international human rights
missions, warning this would complicate efforts to resolve the raging crisis
in the country.

The government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega expelled two expert
missions from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on Wednesday,
accusing them of meddling and bias.

A letter to Organization of American States (OAS) Secretary General Luis
Almagro said the suspension of the Special Follow-up Mechanism for Nicaragua
(MESENI) and the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) would
remain “until conditions of respect for sovereignty and internal affairs are
re-established.”

It accused the two entities of demonstrating “an interfering,
interventionist attitude, echoing United States government policies against
Nicaragua.”

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet voiced outrage at
the decision.

“I am extremely alarmed,” she said in a statement.

She pointed out that the Ortega government had already revoked local human
rights groups’ permits, raiding their headquarters and confiscating property,
and had clamped down on independent media.

This, followed by the “de facto expulsion of the two IACHR organisations…
means there are now virtually no functioning independent human rights bodies
left in Nicaragua,” she said.

In September, the government also expelled a UN human rights mission,
branding a report it produced as biased, and it has also now decided that
IACHR itself will no longer be permitted to visit the country.

“The net result is a country where civil society is in danger of being shut
out altogether, and international organisations are also struggling to keep
operating,” warned Bachelet, a former Chilean president.

The expulsion order came a day before GIEI — created to collaborate with
authorities to assess Nicaragua’s human rights situation — was due to
present findings on human rights during the first weeks of anti-government
protests, which erupted in April.

Rights groups say at least 320 people have been killed in Nicaragua in a
brutal government crackdown launched in response to the escalation in April
of street protests, initially against a now-ditched pension reform.

But the government accused GIEI of acting outside agreed parameters by
directly interviewing victims.

GIEI coordinator Amerigo Incalcaterra denied the allegations, but said the
mission had been advised not to present its report.

Bachelet cautioned that the actions by the Ortega government “make
resolution of the crisis affecting the country much more difficult and risk
blocking all dialogue within the country, with neighbouring states and with
the international community at large, with possible wide-ranging
consequences.”

“I hope we can find some common ground with the government to reverse this
trend.”

BSS/AFP/RY/1734 hrs