The legal office Lawyers Ombudsmen filed, before the Office for the reception and distribution of cases and writings (Ordice) of the Central Judicial Complex of Managua, an amparo appeal against the administrative agreement 10-22 that declared the building of public utility where the headquarters of the Organization of American States (OAS) operated in Managua.
The brief was presented on Wednesday, May 11, by the human rights defender José Antonio López, in which he recalls that the Ortega regime will occupy the expropriated building to install what he has called the “Museum of infamy.”
Related news: Nicaraguan Regime Seizes the OAS Building and Declares It Good for the State
Lopez told Article 66 that the purpose of filing the appeal is to demand “respect for the social rule of law established in article 6 of the Political Constitution.”
On April 26, Rosario Murillo announced the confiscation under the “law” of his regime of the building where the Organization of American States (OAS) worked in Managua, which was taken over by Ortega officials since the 24th of the same month.
“The Office of the Attorney General of the Nicaraguan Republic informs that the real estate that was occupied by the office of the deplorable OAS, despicable OAS, has been declared of public utility and will pass to the Nicaraguan State, who through the (…) Institute of Culture will develop the Museum of Infamy”, expressed the spokeswoman for the regime in her monologue that day to official media.
Related news: Ortega formalizes expropriation of the OAS building in Managua
He added that the agreement would enter into force when it was published in the official newspaper La Gaceta. “This is all good news; it is to expel and confirm the expulsion and ratification of the OAS as an infamous and despicable colony ministry,” Murillo ranted.
The new onslaught by the Ortega regime has been condemned by most of the member countries of the regional body, which has pointed to the action “as an assault on democracy.”
They appeal against modifications to the Autonomy Law
On the other hand, Ombudsmen filed two appeals before the Supreme Court of Justice for the unconstitutionality of Law 113, Law of Reforms and addition to the Law of Notaries, and the commercial code of the Republic of Nicaragua, approved on March 29 of the year 2022.
Likewise, another appeal was filed in the CSJ for unconstitutionality by law number 1114, Law of reforms to Law 582, General Law of Education and Reforms and addition to Law number 89 Law of autonomy of higher education institutions.
The lawyer José López, who was the one who filed the appeals, pointed out that the measure was taken because said laws are opposed “to our Political Constitution of Nicaragua in articles five, which dictates that freedom, justice, respect for the dignity of the human person. Article six that constitutes a social democratic state of law.
In the appeals filed, they cite the dictator Daniel Ortega, president of NicaraguaM, and Gustavo Porras, president of the National Assembly, who are the ones who dictate and approve the laws considered spurious.
To date, the Ombudsman has filed 19 appeals against the Daniel Ortega regime, including the appeal for the seizure of the OAS building. For its part, the dictatorship remains silent.