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Nicaragua says quitting UNESCO over press prize award
Nicaragua says quitting UNESCO over press prize award

eNCA

time05-05-2025

  • Politics
  • eNCA

Nicaragua says quitting UNESCO over press prize award

SAM JOSE - Nicaragua has notified UNESCO of its withdrawal from the organisation in response to its press prize going to a Nicaraguan newspaper in exile, local media reported. UNESCO handed its annual award to Nicaragua's oldest newspaper, La Prensa, whose staff have been forced to publish from abroad as President Daniel Ortega tightens his grip on power. In a statement carried by Nicaraguan media, Foreign Minister Valdrack Jaentschke said UNESCO's decision was "unacceptable and inadmissible." He claimed in a statement carried by media that the newspaper was in the service of the United States and condoned US interference in the country. UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay said in a statement that Nicaragua's decision would "deprive Nicaragua's population of the benefits of a cooperation focused notably on education and culture." But the agency's role was also "to defend the freedom of expression everywhere," Azoulay said. La Prensa, a title almost 100 years old, has been publishing online since Nicaraguan police in 2021 stormed its premises and arrested its manager, Juan Lorenzo Holmann Chamorro. A Nicaraguan court in 2022 sentenced Holmann to nine years in jail, then in 2023 deported him to the United States. Ortega, 79, first served as president from 1985 to 1990 as a former guerrilla hero before returning to power in 2007. Since then Nicaragua has jailed hundreds of opponents. In a statement, Ortega's government said the decision to award the newspaper was "shameful" and described the outlet as "a diabolical expression of traitorous anti-patriotic feeling against Nicaragua." Writing on social media, Holmann said authorities' outrage over the award "gives greater strength to the recognition" of the paper. Nicaragua has shut down more than 5,000 non-governmental organisations since the 2018 mass protests, in which the United Nations estimates more than 300 people died.

UNESCO awards press prize to Nicaraguan newspaper in exile
UNESCO awards press prize to Nicaraguan newspaper in exile

Jordan Times

time04-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Jordan Times

UNESCO awards press prize to Nicaraguan newspaper in exile

PARIS — The UN culture agency Saturday awarded its annual press award to Nicaragua's oldest newspaper, whose staff have been forced to publish from abroad as President Daniel Ortega tightens his grip on power. La Prensa, a title almost 100 years old, has been publishing online since Nicaraguan police in 2021 stormed its premises and arrested its manager Juan Lorenzo Holmann Chamorro. A Nicaraguan court in 2022 sentenced Holmann to nine years in jail then in 2023 deported him to the United States. "La Prensa has made courageous efforts to report the truth to the people of Nicaragua," said Yasuomi Sawa, the chair of the jury for the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize 2025. "Like other civil society organisations, La Prensa has faced severe repression. Forced into exile, this newspaper courageously keeps the flame of press freedom alive," he said. Ortega, 79, first served as president from 1985 to 1990 as a former guerrilla hero and returned to power in 2007. Nicaragua has jailed hundreds of opponents since then. It has also shut down more than 5,000 non-governmental organisations since the 2018 mass protests, in which the United Nations estimates more than 300 people died. Since Ortega's re-election for a fourth consecutive term in 2021, in Nicaragua "independent media has continued to endure a nightmare of censorship, intimidation and threats", media rights group Reporters Without Borders said. Most of the country's independent and opposition media now operate from abroad. 'Apostles of freedom of expression' La Prensa - El Diario de los Nicaraguenses ("The Nicaraguan Peoples' Journal") has seen successive troubles since it was founded in 1926. Right-wing dictator Anastasio Somoza sought to shut it down in the 1950s and the leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front tried to muzzle it in the 1980s. "In nearly a century of existence, La Prensa and its journalists have faced numerous acts of repression, which have intensified in recent years with restrictions on its distribution," UNESCO said. "Since 2021, following the imprisonment and expulsion of its leaders and the confiscation of its assets, La Prensa has continued to inform the Nicaraguan population online, with most of its team in exile, operating from Costa Rica, Spain, Mexico, Germany and the United States," it said. Holmann told AFP the award was welcome "recognition that gives strength to freedom of press in Nicaragua". "In Nicaragua independent journalism doesn't exist. The dictatorship criminalises it," he added. He said that continuing to be a journalist required serious devotion. He dedicated the award to "all independent journalists continuing to report from outside Nicaragua". "They are the apostles of freedom of expression," he said. UN experts last month found Ortega, his wife and co-president Rosario Murillo, and dozens of senior officials responsible for arbitrary detentions, torture and extrajudicial executions.

UNESCO Awards Press Prize To Nicaraguan Newspaper In Exile
UNESCO Awards Press Prize To Nicaraguan Newspaper In Exile

NDTV

time03-05-2025

  • Politics
  • NDTV

UNESCO Awards Press Prize To Nicaraguan Newspaper In Exile

The UN culture agency Saturday awarded its annual press award to Nicaragua's oldest newspaper, whose staff have been forced to publish from abroad as President Daniel Ortega tightens his grip on power. La Prensa, a title almost 100 years old, has been publishing online since Nicaraguan police in 2021 stormed its premises and arrested its manager Juan Lorenzo Holmann Chamorro. A Nicaraguan court in 2022 sentenced Holmann to nine years in jail then in 2023 deported him to the United States. "La Prensa has made courageous efforts to report the truth to the people of Nicaragua," said Yasuomi Sawa, the chair of the jury for the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize 2025. "Like other civil society organisations, La Prensa has faced severe repression. Forced into exile, this newspaper courageously keeps the flame of press freedom alive," he said. Ortega, 79, first served as president from 1985 to 1990 as a former guerrilla hero and returned to power in 2007. Nicaragua has jailed hundreds of opponents since then. It has also shut down more than 5,000 non-governmental organisations since the 2018 mass protests, in which the United Nations estimates more than 300 people died. Since Ortega's re-election for a fourth consecutive term in 2021, in Nicaragua "independent media has continued to endure a nightmare of censorship, intimidation and threats", media rights group Reporters Without Borders said. Most of the country's independent and opposition media now operate from abroad. - 'Apostles of freedom of expression' - La Prensa - El Diario de los Nicaraguenses ("The Nicaraguan Peoples' Journal") has seen successive troubles since it was founded in 1926. Right-wing dictator Anastasio Somoza sought to shut it down in the 1950s and the leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front tried to muzzle it in the 1980s. "In nearly a century of existence, La Prensa and its journalists have faced numerous acts of repression, which have intensified in recent years with restrictions on its distribution," UNESCO said. "Since 2021, following the imprisonment and expulsion of its leaders and the confiscation of its assets, La Prensa has continued to inform the Nicaraguan population online, with most of its team in exile, operating from Costa Rica, Spain, Mexico, Germany and the United States," it said. Holmann told AFP the award was welcome "recognition that gives strength to freedom of press in Nicaragua". "In Nicaragua independent journalism doesn't exist. The dictatorship criminalises it," he added. He said that continuing to be a journalist required serious devotion. He dedicated the award to "all independent journalists continuing to report from outside Nicaragua". "They are the apostles of freedom of expression," he said. UN experts last month found Ortega, his wife and co-president Rosario Murillo, and dozens of senior officials responsible for arbitrary detentions, torture and extrajudicial executions.

U.S. flew 222 political prisoners from Nicaragua to Washington. Now their future is uncertain
U.S. flew 222 political prisoners from Nicaragua to Washington. Now their future is uncertain

Miami Herald

time10-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

U.S. flew 222 political prisoners from Nicaragua to Washington. Now their future is uncertain

Juan Lorenzo Holmann arrived at the Westin hotel near the Washington Dulles International Airport dressed in the same exact clothes he'd been wearing two years earlier when he first walked through the hotel's doors. They were the clothes his jailers had handed him the day he left his Nicaraguan prison cell and boarded a flight out of the country. The shirt and pants fit him much better now than they had that day. Holmann has since regained much of the weight he lost during the 545 days he spent inside El Nuevo Chipote, a prison in Nicaragua's capital infamous as a site of torture. Dozens of former Nicaraguan political prisoners were waiting to greet Holmann in the hotel's lobby. All of them had been passengers aboard the same flight, the result of a U.S. negotiated prisoner release. On Feb. 9, 2023, Nicaraguan authorities transported 222 dissidents directly from their jails or house arrest to a U.S. government-chartered plane, which flew them to Dulles. The group was then put up for two days at the nearby Westin hotel, and granted a period of humanitarian parole, allowing them to legally remain in the country for two years. Returning to Nicaragua was not an option. After the plane took off, the Nicaraguan government revoked the citizenship of all the freed prisoners on board. Holmann, the publisher of Nicaragua's largest newspaper, La Prensa, said his clothes were the only possessions he had left from his life in Nicaragua. 'Even this,' Holmann said, gesturing to what initially appeared to be a red scarf thrown across his shoulder, 'this is the blanket I took from the plane.' All assets and property belonging to the political prisoners were seized by the Nicaraguan government after their expulsion. 'Dressing in this is to remember and protest all the injustices we suffered,' Holmann recalled. The Nicaraguan passport he was given as he boarded the plane is no longer valid – Holmann and the others are citizens of no nation. On Saturday, 60 of the Nicaraguan exiles returned to the Westin hotel to celebrate the two-year anniversary of their liberation and to mark the last day of their humanitarian parole. But a cloud of uncertainty hung over the reunion. Nametags laid out on the check-in table went uncollected, and seats at the dinner tables sat empty. Many of the 'compañeros de vuelo,' or 'flight comrades,' as some call each other, had decided to stay home, some cancelling their travel plans in just the last few days, fearing they might be detained or deported. The group's humanitarian parole is expiring three weeks into the new administration of President Donald Trump, who promised to crack down on what he called a national emergency at the southern border and to conduct mass deportations of unauthorized immigrants already in the United States. Now, even these former prisoners, directly freed by the previous U.S. administration, are uncertain about their futures here, highlighting how chaotic and uncertain a time this is for people in the U.S. fleeing persecution. One year after Holmann began his job as publisher of La Prensa, he was arrested and sentenced to nine years in prison for treason, among other charges. On board the plane, he was surprised to see one of the paper's drivers, Carlos Lam, whose job had been to ferry reporters from one location to the next. Inside the Westin, Lam embraced his old boss and the two laughed over how Lam had received an even harsher sentence than the paper's publisher: five years for treason and another five for publishing 'fake news,' despite Lam having never worked as a journalist. Reunited friends posed for selfies and laughed, comparing them to photos taken at the hotel two years earlier, when they'd worn the same smiles, but on gaunt, emaciated faces. U.S. Ambassador Kevin Sullivan took photo after photo with the prisoners' whose release he helped to coordinate in 2023 as then-ambassador to Nicaragua. 'For any of us involved in it, to have such a large, diverse group of people imprisoned and to help them recover their freedom is something we'll always remember,' Sullivan said. But for some, the intervening years have not been easy. Medardo Mairena, a former dairy farmer who helped organize rural peasants against a planned interoceanic canal project, says he's faced racism and discrimination as he struggles to find a job. 'Work in the countryside was always hard, but this is harder, to try and survive without your culture where no one knows you, where you're humiliated and looked down upon,' he said. Mairena lived with his family in a valley, accessible only by horseback. 'We were happy how we lived, we breathed fresh, uncontaminated air and drank crystal, natural water.' Mairena now lives in Atlanta, where he works washing dishes, cleaning bathrooms and doing construction. He is still separated from his family. 'I didn't ask to be brought here, this isn't my country, but if they want to deport me… Where will I go?' In the lobby, someone draped in a Nicaraguan flag walked through and shouted, 'Que viva Nicaragua libre!' as everyone responded, 'Que viva!' much to the surprise and confusion of the staff and other airport-hotel-patrons. Since President Daniel Ortega's government violently repressed a civil uprising in 2018, an estimated 850,000 Nicaraguans have fled the country. While roughly 225,000 initially went to neighboring Costa Rica, and many still do, hundreds of thousands have also sought to come to the United States. That includes about 96,000 who obtained humanitarian parole under a program former President Joe Biden created to allow pre-vetted immigrants from Nicaragua and several other countries to enter the U.S. with a sponsor. Trump, however, promised a radical overhaul of the U.S. immigration system. In a series of executive orders and administrative moves, he has effectively frozen the asylum system at the border; paused refugee resettlement; terminated deportation protections for some people already in the United States; and ended humanitarian parole programs for immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Venezuela and Nicaragua. Nicaraguans who entered the country through the humanitarian parole program but did not apply for asylum are at risk for deportation when their parole ends and that includes at least a few of the compañeros de vuelo. Not everyone began the process for seeking asylum, said Juan Sebastián Chamorro, who declared his intent to run for president ahead of Nicaragua's 2021 elections and quickly became the fourth potential candidate to be arrested. Some people didn't understand the process, and most didn't go to an immigration lawyer — 'Why? Because it's expensive!' he said, pointing out that when the Nicaraguan government revoked their citizenship, it also seized their property and assets. Some of the 221 Nicaraguans were left completely destitute. One of the former prisoners is a U.S. citizen. 'I'm worried about the ones from our group who don't have asylum cases and now have no protection,' Chamorro added. 'But I'm even more worried about the thousands who came here on humanitarian parole and couldn't afford a lawyer and are now in danger of deportation.' Of the over 90,000 Nicaraguans in the U.S. on humanitarian parole, only about a third have begun to pursue long-term legal solutions, according to Manuel Orozco, the director of the Migration, Remittances, and Development Program at the Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank based in Washington, D.C. According to U.S. Census data, as of 2021 Florida was home to over a third of the Nicaraguans living in the U.S., with Miami Dade County having the highest concentration. Miami's immigration court alone has a backlog of over 31,000 Nicaraguan cases. Trump while campaigning promised that 'on day one, I will launch the largest deportation program of criminals in the history of America.' Unauthorized immigrants without criminal convictions are likely to be swept up in enforcement actions as well; 'less than half of the approximately 8,200 people arrested from Jan. 20 through Feb. 2 so far have criminal convictions,' according to a review of government data by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune. Experts say it would be legally difficult if not impossible to deport someone with a pending asylum application, like many of the Nicaraguan exiles have. But the Trump administration could — as it did during the first term — limit the criteria under which immigration judges can provide asylum, says Andrew Seele, president of the Migration Policy Institute. And while this group likely has strong cases, Jordi Amaral, an immigration expert, said the 'harsh reality is a successful asylum case is not just dependent on the facts of the case, but also depends on who the judge is and where the case is behind heard.' Those who do have asylum cases in the works still worried they could be detained or even deported in the chaos. 'I feel I'm in limbo,' said Lam, the former driver. 'All I have is some paper, not even a court date for my asylum case.' And yet another detention is difficult to contemplate. 'Our group, these ex-prisoners, are people who were interrogated and tortured for years,' said Felix Maradiaga, who was arrested the same day as fellow candidate Chamorro after declaring his intent to run for president. 'The last thing they want is to be stopped at an airport by ICE and to be thrown back into an interrogation room, they're terrified of it.' 'Incertidumbre,' or uncertainty, was the word on everyone's lips at the reunion. 'A good portion of the 222 were concerned by the arrests happening everywhere… and some lawyers were advising them to avoid travelling,' Chamorro said. 'It shows you the level of anxiety, that after all we have suffered—prison, banishment, elimination of our citizenship, exile, family separation—in addition you add the uncertainty that we came as humanitarian parolees.' At midnight, those who did attend spent the Cinderella moment together. Their humanitarian parole expired as the bartender tried to put everything away and the eclectic group of friends politely tried to buy each other one more beer and reminisce about the moment when they realized they were really leaving. One of them had recorded a video from inside the plane as it took off, and a group gathered around the bar to watch it one more time. In it, the rising sun beams in through the windows and moves across the cabin as the plane tilts sideways, turning north. The passengers, who had been prisoners just minutes prior, begin spontaneously shouting out their home towns and departments 'Estelí!' 'Carazo!' 'La Costa Atlántica!' as the 222 jubilantly shout 'que viva!' to each one. 'The memory is a sweet but bitter drink,' Chamorro said, holding a whiskey glass. 'I knew I'd see my wife and daughter again, but I also knew I was looking down at the lake of Managua and the city, that it would be the last time I see them for a long time.'

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