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277 July 19, 1983 TU SANDINISTA WAR ON HUMAN RIGHTS Four years ago
today, the Sandinista revolution toppled the Somoza regime, which
had ruled Nicaragua for 43 years. The rebels victory was widely
hailed as a triumph over what was seen as one of t he worst
violators of human rights in the Americas. Ironic ally--and
tragically for the close to three million Nicaraguans the
Sandinistas have proved that they surpass their predecessors in
abusing the basic rights of their own people in Nicaragua is an a
ll-out war on the human rights of all those who oppose the regime.
The victims number in the thousands and include journalists,
businessmen, politicians, Catholics, Moravians, the Miskito Indian
tribes and even Nicaragua's entire Jewish community What has
erupted Today's human rights violations affect all aspects of
Nicara guan life. There are restrictions on free movement; torture;
denial of due process; lack of freedom of thought, conscience and
religion denial of the right of association and of free lab or
unions.
Since the Marxists took over, Nicaraguan Jews have seen their human
rights systematically violated. Their property has been confiscated
and they have 'been arrested arbitrarily and physically harassed.
Inspiring this sudden anti-Jewish campaign, in part is the intimate
ideological relationship between the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) and the Sandinistas.
Catholics have been subject to similar attacks. Before their
victory, the Sandinistas enjoyed the backing of Archbishop Miguel
Oband o y Bravo, of Nicaragua. Once in power, the Sandinistas dis
covered that the Archbishop's commitment to human rights, civil
liberties and social justice was more than rhetoric. As a result
according to official church reports, prominent clerics are defame
d and attacked physically. Religious education is under siege.
The Moravian Church, too, is under assault,' particularly along
Nicaragua's Eastern Atlantic coast, where it claims the loyalties
of 80 percent of the population. The Sandinistas denounce this
church as a center of counter-revolutionary activity. Some Moravian
pastors now must submit their Sunday sermons for govern ment
approval. One pastor reported that the censors asked him Why do you
always preach on sad themes like sin and redemption?
Why don't you preach about liberation like some of the Catholics
do?"
Mormons, Baptists and Seventh-Day Adventists, meanwhile have seen
their churches seized and then 'returned only under the condi tion
that their pastors not criticize the revolution or the Sandinista
programs.
One of the most brutalized communities is that of the Miskito
Independent human rights organiza None Indians of the Atlantic
Coast tions have been kept from visiting Miskito detention camps
theless, the record of the Sandinista atrociti es against the
Miskito is widely known. arrests of the entire Indian leadership;
banning of the Indian organization Misurasata forcible relocation
of over 15,000 Miskitos; total destruction of 39 villages,
including livestock, personal effects, crops, fru i t trees;
killing, arrest and torture of hundreds of Indians; and the
imposition of harsh military rule on the entire Indian region Among
these atrocities are Similar methods have neutralized political
parties that do not belong to the Sandinista Front, as well as
independent labor unions and their leaders It has taken four years
of cruel repression for the reality of human rights violations in
Nicaragua to become undeniable.
Recent statements by a former Sandinista Intelligence officer dis
closed that some 5,000 Nicaraguans were slaughtered in the early
months of Sandinista rule. The Sandinistas have assassinated and
kidnapped their opponents whether inside or out of Nicaragua.
Examples: the murders of Commander Bravo in Honduras, Jorge Salazar
in Managua, Hector Frances in Costa Rica, and Anastasio Somoza in
Paraguay. Repression is not limited to political foes.
Nicaraguans who refuse to bow to Sandinista rule are likely to be
harassed, arrested or tortured. If an individual fails to conform
to Sandinista standards, he will be prohibited from obtaining em
ployment, food and shelter. Enforcing this is a vast domestic
security network. A Nicaraguan today, in sum, enjoys few human
civil or political rights THE PERMANEWT COMMISSION OF HUMAN
RIGH!I!S The Perma n ent Commission of Nicaraguan Human Rights
(CPDH was 'founded in April 20, 1977, in Managua. During the Somoza
regime, reports of human rights vio.lations by the regime were
allowed to be published daily by the CPDH and'were frequently
quoted by the intern a tional press. Amnesty International, for
example, was able to monitor violations in Nicaragua based on the
reports of the Commission 3 In a 1982 interview in Washington,
D.C., Dr. Jose Esteban Gonzalez, then National Coordinator of the
Permanent Commissio n said that under Somoza he could "call the
editors of major U.S newspapers and my statements concerning
violations of human rights by the Somoza regime made headlines the
following day they don't even answer my calls."
Washington, Dr. Gonzalez had been fo rced into exile after numerous
threats from the Sandinistas and several closures of the
Commission's offices in Managua. Dr. Gonzalez believed that he
could no longer serve as a functional member of the Commission
inside Nicaragua and has since started a human rights group in
exile.
The Commission's chairmanship was assumed by Javier Sabala the
present coordinator in Managua is Martha Baltodano, who files
monthly reports from Managua under difficult conditions The
Commission's reports of continued violations of human rights by the
Sa n dinistas are filed with the International Committee of the Red
Cross and Amnesty International Today At the time of his visit to
POLITICAL PRISONERS Under Somoza, 1,000 political. prisoners at
most were jailed without due process tional campaign on behalf of
them It was not until June 22, 1982 however, that Amnesty
International first urged the "Nicaraguan government to review the
cases of over 3,000 people convicted after the 1979 revolution of
criminal offenses committed under the pre vious government If The
request was made after evidence mounted that 4,331 Nicara guans had
been convicted by special Sandinista tribunals after the fall of
Somoza. The Amnesty International report, however, ignored the
plight of the thousands of Miskitos who were evicted fr o m their
villages and who were made to walk eight hours to a "relocation
center dreds of other Miskitos including the destruction of 39
villages along the Coco River, bordering on Honduras Amnesty
International conducted an interna Nor was mention made of t he
burning and killing of hun NICARAGUAN LABOR VIOLATIONS The
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU officially
protested to the Nicaraguan government on December 18 1981,
concerning the restrictions placed on attendance at a union traini
n g course given by the International Center for Advanced and
Vocational Training in Turin, Italy. One candidate was selected
from the government-controlled Sandinist Confederation of Nicara
guan Workers CST) and one from the Confederation of Trade Union Un
i ty (CUS), an independent free trade union. The CST candidate was
approved, but the Nicaraguan government denied permission to the
representative of CUS. The government dismissed the incident as a
bureaucratic mistake-the candidates had not cleared exit pe r mits
with the Ministry of Planning, they said-and neither candidate
went. 4 In February and October 1982, the
1nternational.Organization of Employers (IOE), filed complaints
charging the government of Nicaragua detained Enrique Bolanos
Gayer, acting Chair m an of the Supreme Council of Private
Enterprise (COSEP), to prevent his par ticipation in a joint
economic forum between the governments of Nicaragua and Venezuela.
Also restricted or detained were Enrique Dreifus, Chairman of
COSEP, Ismael Reyes, Vice-ch a irman of COSEP William Baez,
Assistant Director of the Nicaraguan Development Institute, Rosendo
Diaz, Executive Secretary of the Union of Agri cultural Producers,
and Alejandro Burgos, Executive Director of COSEP The Nicaraguan
government denied the char ges and Dreifus and his associates.later
were arrested. Many labor and private enter prise representatives
are now in exile, due to restrictions imposed by the Sandinista
regime.
Since the creation of the Sandinista-controlled union, CUS has come
under att ack, and its members have been repeatedly har assed.
Members of CST have.been rewarded by the Sandinistas for their
loyalty As a result it is increasingly difficult for the
independent CUS to survive as a free trade union THE SYSTEM OF
REPRESSION One of t h e first rights to be attacked by the
Sandinistas was freedom of the press. The new regime censored
Prensa, the country's only independent newspaper. For years it was
the voice of opposition to the Somoza regime is heavily censored.
Copy must be submitted t o ,the censors seven hours before
printing. This directly violates the Sandinista's own laws
'lguaranteeingl' freedom of expression and thought. The press is
not allowed to criticize the Sandinista government It now is
repeatedly shut and From the beginni n g, the new regime instituted
the I1block1l system under the General Directorate of State
Security (DGSE and under the direct supervision of intelligence
sector F7 is a "spy on your neighbor" system that encourages
citizens to report to the authorities tho se who do not work for
the revolution.
Should a member of the community be reported as a counter-revolu
tionary, the security representatives of the I1block1l may come and
harass the neighbor, destroy his property and stone his house.
The neighbors observ e the punishment and heed the warning: do not
work against the revolution. This is the system common to
Soviet-bloc countries This While elements of the Somoza National
Guard tortured political opponents, they did not employ
psychological torture. The San dinistas do. The State Security
torture facilities are 'patterned after Soviet KGB methods. In
fact, the Managua prisons were designed from Cuban plans which, in
turn, originated in Moscow.
The Nicaraguan interrogators are trained by Cubans,who have at le
ast five years experience of working in the Soviet Union. One of
the early victims of this torture was Miskito leader Stedman 5
Fagoth, now leader of one of the groups fighting against the
Sandinistas.
A part,icularly sadistic torture method used by Sandi nistas .is
the %est-cut.Il As an example of what happens to anti-government
sympathizers, captured counter-revolutionaries are taken to the
nearest village where their arms and legs are severed, causing them
to bleed to death.
One of the most common ways of killing prisoners in Managua is
through the "ley de fuga or "escape law Prisoners are taken from
jail.and driven to the countryside can go free and are shot as they
start to walk away. Later, the prisoners are described as having
been killed trying to escape.
This method was used against many suspected Somoza supporters They
are told they ANTI-SEMITISM The Nicaraguan Jewish community, which
numbered 200 in the early 1970s, was reduced to approximately 50
individuals after the Sandinista takeover in July 1979 all Jews
from the country. With the support of the Palestine Liberation
Organization, an anti-Semitic campaign began in 1977 when
Sandinistas defaced Managua's synagogue with anti-Jewish and
anti-Israel slogans. In 1978, the same synagogue was fireb ombed.
After the revolution, Jews who had been residing temporarily
outside Nicaragua were not permitted to return. When 70-year-old
Abraham Gorn was identified as the president of the Nicaraguan
Jewish com munity, he was jailed for two weeks and forced to sweep
streets.
His factory was expropriated, his bank account seized and he was
evicted from his home.
Nicaragua, anti-Semitism thrives. The July 15 and 17, 1982 editions
of the government-controlled newspaper Nuevo Diario denounced Jews.
Jewish houses of worship were called IrSynagogues of Satan.I into
an elite social club for the children of high-ranking San dinista
officials The Sandinistas have driven Though there are no longer
any Jews in The Sandinistas have converted Managua's synagogue The
Sandi nistas are also attacking the Protestant minority.
Through physical attacks on Protestant villages, harassment of
church leaders and the imposition of communist ideology on these
communities, the Sandinistas are rapidly achieving a society void
of religiou s diversity policy of t8reeducation11 in the Atlantic
Coast, the area inhabited by the Moravian Protestants leaders with
Nicaraguan and Cuban Marxists to indoctrinate the populace ideology
and of its proponents. The Sandinistas then censored the press and
cut off charitable funds to the Atlantic coast com munities. After
isolating the Moravians, the Sandinistas executed many of them and
destroyed their churches After coming to power, the Sandinistas
immediately began a The Sandinistas replaced church The r e sult
was the violent rejection of the alien 6 CONCLUSION In light of the
Sandinistas' increasingly repressive and numerous human rights
violations, the Reagan Administration must bring the plight of the
Nicaraguan people to the attention of the internatio nal community.
Pressure applied by the Organization of American States against
Somoza played a major role in his government's downfall.
Sandinista human rights guarantees to its citizens are based on the
Charters of the Organization of American States and the United
Nations. The OAS should review the charges pressed by Nicaragua's
own independent human rights Commission and by international
organizations.
Hearings should be scheduled in the U.S. Congress to study human
rights violations in Nicaragua. Special attention should focus on
the persecution of religious and ethnic minorities by the
Sandinistas.
International and U.S. organizations should call upon the
Sandinista government to Recognize th e rights of Nicaraguan Jewish
citizens and return their property and material goods, including
their synagogue in Managua Permit the Miskito Indians and other
indigenous groups to return to their homes on the Atlantic Coast
and allow them to continue thei r traditional lifestyle, compensate
them for lost crops, property and personal effects taken by the San
dinistas. Security officers responsible for the murders and abuses
against them should be brought to trial and sentenced.
The Reagan Administration, mea nwhile, should encourage Western
nations to pressure the Sandinista regime to stop violating the
human rights of the Nicaraguan people assisting the Sandinista
government until it allows international organizations to
investigate charges of human rights v iolations.
The White House should also encourage the U.S. labor movement and
those in Japan and Europe to pressure the Sandinistas to recognize
the right of Nicaraguan workers to organize freely The West should
not consider If the U.S. and the West.truly a re concerned about
human rights they no longer will be silent about the lengthening
record of violations against the Nicaraguan people.
Richard Araujo Policy Analyst The author wishes to acknowledge the
valuable assistance of Heritage Foundation Research Assistant Jay
S. Marks in the preparation of this study 7 BIBLIOGRAPHY ON HUMAN
RIGHTS IN NICARAGUA International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, United Nations, Initial reports of States parties due in
1979, Addendum:' Nicaragua Distr. GENERAL CC PR/C/14/Add.3, March
8, 1983.
Commision Permanente de Derechos Humanos (CPDH), Cuarto Informe
Oficial Julio 79- Dic 80 De Montoya 2 C. A1 Lago, Apartado 563
Managua, Nicaragua (in Spanish).
Commision Permanente de Derechos Humanos (CPDH Informe Mensual in
Spanish).
The International League of Human Rights, Nicaragua's Human Rights
Record Working Paper. Comments, Analysis and Background Information
on the Report of the Government of Nicaragua to the Human Rights
Committee, March 1983 John J. Tierney, Jr., Somozas and
Sandinistas, The U.S. and Nicaragua in the Twentieth Century.
Washington, D.C.: Council for Inter-American Security 1983 Max
Singer, Nicaragua--The Stolen Revolution. Washington, D.C.: United
States Information Agency, 1.983.
Report of the Amnesty International Missions to the Republic of
Nicaragua August 1979, January 1980 and August 19
80. Published November 1981.