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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams
Showing posts with label Nicaragua. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicaragua. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2018

Marxists slaughter protesters in Nicaragua


Anti-Marxist protests in Nicaragua

They keep killing people
until they love Marx
Here is the story the corrupt American
corporate media will not cover.


(Agence France-Presse)  -  More than 200 Nicaraguan university students were reunited with their parents Saturday after a tense night of armed attacks that left two dead and dozens wounded.

The students had sought refuge in a local church after police forced them out of the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua, which had been occupied during two months of protests against the government of President Daniel Ortega.

“It was a really hard night. They discharged their entire heavy arsenal against stones and mortars,” said a sobbing young man who declined to give his name out of fear. “They wanted to kill us all.”

Father Raul Zamora said the students came under fire at the Jesus of Divine Mercy church for more than 12 hours. He said a journalist from The Washington Post and a journalist from the BBC exited the church safely earlier Saturday, along with some wounded students who needed urgent hospital care.




The police onslaught was televised by local media outlets and covered by three local journalists who reported via Facebook Live. Students fearing for their lives sent farewell messages to friends and family. “I did it for the country and I don’t regret it,” a crying girl said in a video that went viral. “Forgive me mama, I love you.”

The police have not issued official statements.

Two students were killed, Roman Catholic cardinal Leopoldo Brenes said.

On Saturday morning, Cardinal Brenes negotiated with the president’s office for the safe transfer of students out of the church and to the Metropolitan cathedral, where representatives from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights were on hand.

“We have said not one more death, and this keeps happening,” Brenes said. “These two deaths hurt.”

Tensions in Nicaragua erupted this spring after the government announced cuts to social security. The changes were quickly reversed, but students took to the streets and occupied the main university with a wider call for Ortega to step down.

The crisis has left around 270 dead and more than 2,000 wounded as forces loyal to the government crackdown on opponents.

Read More . . .

Anti Marxist protests

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Illegal Aliens and Geography



Today's Geography Lesson
  • Call me a "crazy blogger" (which I am) but could the American welfare state have something to do illegal aliens traveling thousands of miles north through dangerous Mexico? After all safe nations are just a few miles away to the south.


Nicaragua to El Paso, Texas  =  2,523 miles

Nicaragua to Costa Rica  =  0 Miles (Next door)
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Nicaragua to Panama  =  379 Miles



Panama City, Panama
kk
Illegal aliens in so-called "dangerous" countries totally ignore the safety of wealthy, modern Panama right next door to them. Instead they travel thousands of miles through dangerous Mexico to get to Texas.

Gleaming, wealthy and safe Panama.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Illegal alien Cubans opposed in Costa Rica


You a communist? Huh? How'd you like it, man? They tell you all the time what to do, what to think, what to feel. Do you wanna be like a sheep? Like all those other people? Baah! Baah!
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You wanna work eight, ten fucking hours? You own nothing, you got nothing! Do you want a chivato on every corner looking after you? Watching everything you do? Everything you say, man? Do you know I eat octopus three times a day? I got fucking octopus coming out of my fucking ears. I got the fuckin' Russian shoes my feet's comin' through. How you like that? What, you want me to stay there and do nothing? Hey, I'm no fuckin' criminal, man. I'm no puta or thief. I'm Tony Montana, a political prisoner from Cuba. And I want my fuckin' human rights, now!
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Illegal Aliens Everywhere

  • I am in SHOCK that Hispanic nations like Costa Rica and Nicaragua actually want to control their borders and keep out Hispanic illegals. Maybe, just maybe, controlling your borders is not racism.


(Miami Herald)  -  Costa Rica has issued a warning to the new wave of undocumented Cuban migrants hoping to travel by land from Ecuador to Central America and eventually the United States: they will not pass.
Foreign Minister Manuel González Sanz told el Nuevo Herald that Costa Rica was already worn down by its handling of the previous wave of 7,800 Cubans who were detained or stranded here from November of 2015 until March.
“I want to make absolutely clear, to all the (Cuban) migrants who are coming and those already in Panama, that Costa Rica cannot and will not receive them,” González said. The country “will make use of all domestic and international measures at its disposal to address this situation, if we face something similar to what we faced from November to March.”
He added that waves of undocumented Cuban migrants “will continue as long as the U.S. law that favors Cuban migration, the well-known Cuban Adjustment Act, continues,” and indicated that there's a profound discomfort in the region with the Act.
The issue of Cuban migration “should be part of the bilateral relations between Cuba and the United States, but the reality is that the countries from Ecuador to Mexico, we are the ones caught in the middle and we are the ones suffering the consequences of laws that incite that migration,” the minister said.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article71239892.html#storylRead More . . . .




Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article71239892.html#storylink=cpyRead More . . . .


Cubans sleep on the floor while waiting for a solution in northern
Costa Rica, some 300 km north of the capital, San José.
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Nicaragua violently turns back Cuban illegal aliens

(Tico Times)  -  On Sunday, Cuban migrant Suartey Ébora lived moments of terror. Ébora had just crossed from Costa Rica into Nicaraguan territory with 1,600 others when they were attacked by the Nicaraguan army and anti-riot police.

“They didn’t ask us anything. They made us all sit down in the street, and out of nowhere they began firing tear gas and rubber bullets. Several people were injured,” Ébora said.

A tear-gas canister exploded next to the face of Ébora’s 1-year-old daughter, Lindsay, injuring her lip. The child had trouble breathing, and the gas burned her skin.
“She almost died,” Ébora said.

“We ran back to Costa Rican territory, and here we’re being treated as refugees,” Ébora said.

Red Cross spokesman Gerald Jiménez told The Tico Times that 30 Cubans were treated for exposure to tear gas and alleged beatings from the Nicaraguan military. Read More . . . .


Monday, July 13, 2015

China Marches into Central America


Demostrators hold letters reading “No to the canal”

Socialists Attack Private Property

  • The Socialists in Nicaragua look to confiscate private property under a secret deal and turn it over to Chinese businesses.  China marches on while Obama golfs.


Everything in the path of the proposed trans-oceanic canal in Nicaragua would have to be relocated. Churches. Cemeteries. Stockyards.

As many as 28,000 people scattered in villages and towns face the likelihood that their lands would be expropriated. The government pledges they will be better off, living in new settlements with a bit of cash in their pockets. But skepticism abounds. Ranchers are angry. They’ve held 44 marches and rallies in the past nine months. A few events have turned violent.

The ruling conference of Roman Catholic bishops has voiced concern. In March, it issued a statement warning that people along the path of the canal feel “anxiety and uncertainty,” and that the project must be carried out with an eye to the environment and to the benefit of all Nicaraguans. Otherwise, the bishops warned, it “could trigger unwanted armed conflict” as well as expose Nicaraguans to “the massive presence of people outside our culture, history, traditions and religious beliefs” – a reference to the expected influx of Chinese workers.


Nicaragua’s proposed trans-oceanic canal promises to link the Atlantic and the Pacific, but it also is dividing the angry people living near its proposed route from the majority in the nation who support the canal.

One day in this ranch town in eastern Nicaragua, Medardo Mairena Sequeira climbed into the bed of a silver pickup truck. He grabbed a microphone hooked up to a small amplifier and spoke to a few dozen people, some on horseback and others on foot. Most wore baseball caps or broad-brimmed cowboy hats. Mairena railed against the 50-year concession granted to HKND Group, the company controlled by a Chinese telecom billionaire that is to build the canal.

Mairena declared that the concession violated Nicaraguan law, and that the Chinese company would not look out for the interests of Nicaraguans.

“Our sovereignty is being handed away.”

“What the farmers believe is that this will be a confiscation. They’ve just heard too many lies,” said Manfredo Hidalgo Benavides, a rancher, as he gazed at cattle penned in a local stockyard.

The concession allows HKND Group to expropriate and control up to 6.2 miles of land on either side of the 170-mile-long canal route, a fat ribbon across the country’s midsection. While some farmers would be allowed back in to cultivate vast flattened mounds of excavated material, most would be relocated away from the protected canal zone.

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://media.mcclatchydc.com/static/features/NicaCanal/LAND.html#storylink=cpy

Read More . . . .


Nicaraguans protest against canal plan






Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Obama Golfs While Russian Fighter Jets Come to Nicaragua

























Now Putin Arms Nicaragua


(IPS News)  -  Nicaragua, the second-poorest country in the Americas, is tapping into its depleted coffers to upgrade its ageing military fleet with costly new equipment from Russia – a move that has sparked controversy at home and concern among the country’s Central American neighbours.
The decision was officially confirmed Feb. 10 by the Nicaraguan army chief, General Adolfo Zepeda.
When rumours spread in the international media that Managua was seeking to acquire a fleet of six to 12 MiG-29 fighter jets, Zepeda acknowledged that they were looking for warplanes for “defensive” purposes: to intercept drug trafficking flights by cartels in the country’s Caribbean region. He also said the military planned to buy gunboats. No further details were offered.
The announcement drew criticism from civilian sectors in Nicaragua and Central America, which argued that the poorest country in the Americas after Haiti shouldn’t be trying to buy fighter planes, which in the case of the MiG-29s cost 29 million dollars apiece.
According to World Bank figures, 42.5 percent of Nicaragua’s 6.1 million people were living in poverty in 2009, the last year official statistics were provided by the government.
Nicaragua has supported geostrategic readjustments by Russia in its zone of influence, on the last occasion backing the Kremlin in the conflict with Ukraine and the annexation of Crimea.
Russia has responded to that support with donations and loans of technology, medicine, means of transport and food. The military provisions and cooperation totaled 26 million dollars from 2009 to 2014.
Russian warships dock in Nicaraguan ports while its fighter jets land in Managua; and Nicaraguan and Russian vessels patrol the waters of the Caribbean, as a training centre for the fight against drugs is being built in the capital with Russian funds and support from Russian experts.
On Feb. 11-12, Russia’s defence minister, Sergey Shoygu, visited Managua with the stated aim of strengthening bilateral cooperation in the area, after his deputy minister, Anatoli Antonov, included Nicaragua on a list of Russia’s three main military partners in Latin America, along with Cuba and Venezuela.

Read More . . . .


The MiG 29 Comes to Nicaragua
“One doesn’t combat drug trafficking with that kind of heavy military equipment for fighting wars,” Costa Rican Foreign Minister Manuel González said in late February after bringing up the matter with Secretary of State John Kerry.
A former armed forces commander in Honduras, Romeo Vásquez Velásquez, told media there that Nicaragua’s possible acquisition would create “an imbalance for the region.”
Colombia has been more muted, but its air force contains aged C-7 Kfir fighters from Israel and Cessna A-37 Dragonfly light strike jets, neither of which are a match for the MiG-29s. Colombia maintains a dispute with Nicaragua over maritime territory, following a 2012 ruling by the International Court of Justice in The Hague that expanded Nicaragua’s sea boundaries to the detriment of Colombia.  (McClatchy News)

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/03/23/260684/russias-return-to-nicaragua-worrying.html#storylink=cpy




Sunday, December 28, 2014

China marches into Nicaragua while America sleeps


Nicaraguan campesino Yimer Duran after being released from jail (courtesy/Confidencial)

Anti-Chinese Nicaraguans Attacked

  • The ruling party dispatched members of its Sandinista Youth to occupy the streets of Managua as a show of force to deter others from protesting.
  • The Chinese Communists are backing one of their businessmen with $50 Billion to build a canal through Central America.


MANAGUA, Nicaragua — More than a dozen Nicaraguans are reported missing and six more illegally jailed after a series of violent Christmas Eve clashes between riot police and campesinos who are organizing to defend their land against a mysterious Chinese billionaire’s canal project.

The government of Sandinista President Daniel Ortega has already released 41 of the anti-canal protesters — farmers and cowboys — who were broken and bruised during police beatdowns in southern and central Nicaragua. But six leaders of the campesinos’ Land Defense Council are still locked-up without charges somewhere in the bowels of Managua’s infamous El Chipote Prison, the same cells used by the former Somoza dictatorship to torture political prisoners decades ago.

According to testimonies from the released prisoners, the group’s incarcerated leader, Octavio Ortega (no relation to the president), is in critical condition. He was allegedly beaten brutally to the point where he urinated blood and was bleeding out of one eye. Police have refused to comment on the allegations, and human rights activists have been denied access to the prison to see him reports Fusion News.


“This is no longer a dictatorship lite, this is a now a full-blown repressive dictatorship that is baring its claws and releasing its dogs,” Vilma Nuñez, head of the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights, told Fusion.
Nuñez says the Sandinista regime has reportedly started a methodical “manhunt” in the countryside to find other anti-canal protesters who eluded capture on Dec. 24. She said police officers and soldiers are reportedly going “door-to-door” throughout the countryside trying to find those responsible for this week’s roadblocks in Rivas, El Tule and San Miguelito. Sandinista authorities have not commented on the alleged persecution.
“This canal is already stained in blood,” Defense Council member Henry Ruiz, who avoided capture during this week’s police raids, told Fusion on Friday afternoon. “We are going to hold firm, we will not back down. And they are going to see what happens as more Nicaraguans join this movement.”
The ruling party, meanwhile, has dispatched members of its Sandinista Youth to occupy the streets of Managua as a show of force to deter others from protesting.
On Friday afternoon, Sandinistas on motorcycles circled a group of protesters who were calling for the release of prisoners still held in Chipote. The so-called motorizados, a ragtag rapid-response biker gang, impeded the group from marching to the jail. But the street pressure worked; a second batch of prisoners was released two hours later.
Campesinos show injuries after being released (photo from Facebook)




















The canal that divided Nicaragua
The Nicaragua canal project hasn’t broken ground yet, but it has already divided the country deeply. Opinion polls show that most Nicaraguans are in favor of the canal, but those with the most to lose — the 7,000 families whose properties will be forcibly expropriated — are making the most noise. And they’re winning converts in the process.
At a bizarre groundbreaking ceremony on Dec. 22 (the only breaking of ground was done on a construction access road), Chinese concessionaire Wang Jing announced that real construction is now scheduled to begin at the end of 2015, which made the confetti-drop seem premature.

But the Sandinistas and opposition forces aren’t waiting for the bulldozers — they’re already digging trenches of their own in anticipation of a prolonged battle for the future of the country.
The opening shots were fired this week during Wang’s brief visit to Nicaragua for his mega-super-fun access-road extravaganza. Wang’s presence in the country triggered a series of anti-canal protests by farmers and cowboys who insist their land is not for sale to the Chinese.
Protesters blocked the interior highway to El Tule and the Inter-American Highway through Rivas, a chokepoint south of Managua. One group hijacked an oil tanker and threatened to turn it into a giant fireball.

That brought the riot cops out, truncheons swinging, teargas popping and rubber bullets whizzing. The dust-up was brutal and swift. When the chemical cloud lifted, between 40-60 people were missing and dozens injured, based on different accounts.

“The prisoners were badly beaten and injured,” human rights leader Marcos Carmona told Fusion on Friday night, shortly after police released the prisoners to his custody. “We are documenting the police brutality now to denounce the situation to the international community.”
Human rights activists say the escalation of protests and repression does not bode well for the year ahead. To that point, protest leaders say they’re already planning to ratchet up anti-canal demonstrations in a way that will get noticed around the world.
“We are going to make the international community — all the international tourists who come to Nicaragua — see the government repression,” said veteran rabble-rouser Carlos Bonilla, who has been at the center of various anti-government protest movements over the years. “We’re going to block roads, prevent tourists from getting to their beach destinations, and make them see the chaos and confusion in Nicaragua.”
Anti-Canal protests in Nicaragua.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

China to break ground on Nicaragua canal



China in Central America
While Obama played golf the Communist Chinese
cut a canal deal in Nicaragua.


President Manuel Ortega said on Saturday that the construction of a massive inter-oceanic canal in Nicaragua that could significantly alter global trade would start at the end of 2014.

“The Nicaraguan government and HKND Group are pleased to confirm that canal construction work will begin as planned in December 2014,” Ortega announced alongside Chinese tycoon Wang Jing, whose group has secured the rights to dig and operate the waterway.

Ortega gave the Chinese group a concession to manage the future shipping channel for 50 years, with the possibility to renew the contract for another 50 reports Agence France-Presse.

The massive 30-billion-euro project would connect the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, and rival the century-old Panama canal.
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 The Panama canal is currently building a new lane of traffic to double its capacity, but the expansion is running behind schedule.

Nicaraguan authorities have said that besides the future waterway, their project would include an oil pipeline, an overland route, two deepwater ports, two airports and duty-free zones.

Nicaraguan legislators in June approved granting Wang Jing the canal concession, and in December the Supreme Court in Managua said the project did not violate the constitution.

Opponents say the project is not financially feasible and have raised concerns about displacing indigenous groups and damage to the environment.

Saturday’s announcement appeared to contradict recent government statements that construction would be delayed until 2015.

One week ago, Manuel Coronel Kautz, president of the canal authority, told a national newspaper that digging would not start on time because the canal’s path remained undefined.
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Panama is currently expanding its century-old canal, and the massive project is running behind schedule.
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The Panamanian upgrade aims to make that 80-kilometer waterway, which handles five percent of global maritime trade, big enough to handle new cargo ships that can carry 12,000 containers.  That project is costing $5.2 billion, including a third set of locks for the canal which currently welcomes ships that carry up to 5,000 containers.  Feasibility studies are under way in Nicaragua. But it is not yet known how the future canal might be built in mechanical and logistical terms, if it gets a final green light.


'We Love China'
Nicaragua President Daniel Ortega and Chinese businessman Wang Jing have signed an agreement giving his company the right to build a shipping channel across Nicaragua that would compete with the Panama Canal.

United States Marines with the captured flag of Augusto César Sandino in 1932.
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United States occupation of Nicaragua
Why is there no U.S. built canal in Nicaragua?  The people of Nicaragua have not been fond of America over the years due to our endless interference in their internal politics going back to the 19th century.
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The United States occupation of Nicaragua was part of the larger conflict known as the Banana Wars. The formal occupation began in 1912, although several other operations were conducted before the full-scale invasion. United States military interventions in Nicaragua were intended to prevent the construction of the Nicaraguan Canal by any nation but the United States.
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Nicaragua assumed a quasi-protectorate status under the 1916 Chamorro-Bryan Treaty. The occupation ended as Augusto C. Sandino, a Nicaraguan revolutionary, led guerrilla armies against U.S. troops. The onset of the Great Depression made it costly for the U.S. government to maintain the occupation so a withdrawal was ordered in 1933.
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See United States occupation of Nicaragua.