Brazil, Nicaragua expel each others' ambassadors

BSS
Published On: 09 Aug 2024, 11:11

RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug 9, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Brazil and Nicaragua expelled each
others' ambassadors on Thursday, as souring relations between the two Latin
American nations deepened into a fresh diplomatic feud.

A Brazilian diplomatic source told AFP the latest flareup in tensions came
after Brazil's ambassador to Nicaragua skipped an official ceremony in
Managua.

The event was the July 19 commemoration of Nicaragua's Sandinista revolution
that would eventually lead to President Daniel Ortega coming to power,
several exiled Nicaraguan opposition media reported.

Brazil's ambassador was not the only diplomat absent from the ceremony, the
source noted.

Nicaragua nonetheless asked the Brazilian ambassador to leave the country,
leading Brasilia to reciprocate on Thursday.

Brazil's ambassador "has left our country, our Nicaragua, and similarly our
ambassador... is on her way to our homeland," Nicaraguan Vice President
Rosario Murillo, who is also Ortega's wife, told state media.

Relations between the two leftist-led countries have cooled since Ortega
ignored attempts by Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to
mediate -- at the request of Pope Francis -- talks to help secure the release
of a jailed bishop.

In January, Nicaragua released two Roman Catholic bishops, 13 priests and
three seminarians, sending them to Rome, according to exiled opposition
media.

"This is a tough blow for the Nicaraguan dictatorship because it will become
more isolated and alone in Latin America, but above all more isolated and
alone within the left-wing Latin American group," the country's former
ambassador to the Organization of American States, Arturo McFields, who lives
in exile in the United States, told AFP.

Later on Thursday, Nicaragua's government said it had released seven priests
detained last week and sent them to Rome.

They were part of a group of 13 Nicaraguan priests placed under house arrest
in the northern city of Matagalpa.

The government did not release any details about the other six priests.

Ortega came to power in the 1980s following the Sandinista victory.

Although he was voted out of office in 1990, he returned to the presidency in
2007 and has since been accused of establishing an authoritarian regime that
does not tolerate opposition.

More than 300 people were killed, according to the United Nations, when anti-
government protests spread across Nicaragua in 2018.

Ortega's government portrayed the demonstrations as an attempted coup
orchestrated by the United States.

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