Today: December 23, 2024
June 11, 2023
1 min read

Nicaraguan regime sentences six opponents without specifying what crimes they are accused of

Nicaraguan regime sentences six opponents without specifying what crimes they are accused of

In a secret hearing, according to complaints, a sentence was handed down against six opponents of the Ortega regime. The citizens were arrested in April of this year within the framework of the fifth anniversary of the 2018 rebellion. Those convicted respond to the names of: Hazel Martínez Ulloa and Brenda Lee Baldelomar, originally from Chinandega; Martha Lorena Centeno Marín, from Managua; Ivonne Patricia Espinoza Hurtado, Luis Enrique Palma Obando and Anner Herrera, from Boaco.

The accusation against this group was made on April 24 and the case was brought by the Fourth Local Court of Managua in charge of the titular judge Ana María Vado Miranda. The State of Nicaragua appears as a victim and up to now the crimes they are accused of are unknown.

Related note: Ortega justice finds journalist Víctor Ticay guilty and transfers him to La Modelo

The process continues in execution for the reading of the sentence in the Second Criminal District Court of Execution, Sentencing and Penitentiary Surveillance, Circumscription of Managua.

Once again, the Ortega justice system used four police officers as witnesses against the group of defendants.

Abuses in judicial processes continue

Nicaraguan regime sentences six opponents without specifying what crimes they are accused of

Pablo Cuevas, general director of the Nicaraguan Human Rights Ombudsman’s Office (DNDH), points out that these arbitrary processes continue to be invalid and only show that the authorities act according to the regime, violating legitimate defense, by denying them to have a lawyer they trust. Given this, the lawyer maintained that “those vices of the law only make them hostages of the government.”

Until the end of May, the Blue and White Monitoring Agency recorded 81 judicial processes with alternate measure, among the current political prisoners are Monsignor Rolando Álvarez and the journalist Víctor Ticay.

Source link

Latest Posts

They celebrated "Buenos Aires Coffee Day" with a tour of historic bars - Télam
Cum at clita latine. Tation nominavi quo id. An est possit adipiscing, error tation qualisque vel te.

Categories

Unicef ​​exceeded $30 million in its television marathon
Previous Story

Unicef ​​exceeded $30 million in its television marathon

Inundaciones en Camagüey
Next Story

A week under water: Images of the floods in Cuba

Latest from Blog

Dangers at the borders: a call to action

We must protect the power of the vote

Embed note December 23, 2024, 3:00 AM December 23, 2024, 3:00 AM When the noise of Christmas and New Year is over, Bolivia will be immersed in the electoral process of 2025.
Go toTop