Press groups condemn threats against Nicaragua journalists
Press groups condemn threats against Nicaragua journalists
International press organizations and the United States government have condemned intimidation and threats against Nicaraguan journalists.

MANAGUA, Nicaragua International press organizations and the United States government have condemned intimidation and threats against Nicaraguan journalists.

Gerall Chvez, an independent Nicaraguan journalist living in exile in Costa Rica since 2018, said last weekend that he and his family in Nicaragua had received graphic threats. He was threatened again Wednesday and has begun receiving phone calls, he said.

Chvez has been threatened before, but said he believes this intensification is the result of his recent reporting on several hundred Nicaraguans stuck at the border with Costa Rica. The Nicaraguan government has refused to let them return without paying for COVID-19 tests, which the migrants say they cant afford.

The Nicaraguan government does not like you saying the truth, but I only do my job, Chvez said.

Meanwhile, Anbal Toruo, director of Radio Daro in the western Nicaragua city of Len, said his station suffered hours of intimidation by paramilitaries and police. He said their station was surrounded Saturday by police wearing masks and that vehicles belonging to station employees were towed.

Intimidation of the press has increased since anti-government protests began in April 2018. What began as demonstrations against changes to the social security system expanded into a general movement against President Daniel Ortegas government.

Michael Kozak, the U.S. State Departments acting assistant secretary of the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, said via Twitter Wednesday, We condemn the Ortega regimes latest efforts to intimidate Nicaraguan independent media in Leon and elsewhere. Nicaraguas brave journalists have shown that they will continue to tell the ugly truths that the regime so desperately wants to hide.

Chvez said an anonymous letter and thumb drive containing an animated video that depicted his decapitation were delivered to his familys home in El Rosario, south of Managua.

Chvez reports for the online outlet Nicaragua Actual.

Nicaragua police had not commented on the threats.

PEN Internationals Nicaragua branch, as well as the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the threats.

It is unacceptable that, even after being forced into exile, journalist Gerall Chvez continues to be threatened for his work, and that now his family in Nicaragua is being targeted as well, said CPJ Central and South America Program Coordinator Natalie Southwick.

Edison Lanza, special rapporteur for freedom of expression of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, said via Twitter, the state clearly knows the risk that the journalist and his family face. They have an international obligation to investigate and protect.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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