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Exiled Nicaraguan opposition leader sees dwindling options for democracy

DORAL, Fla.
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FILE - Opposition leader and former Nicaragua presidential candidate Felix Maradiaga, talks to reporters after arriving from Nicaragua at Washington Dulles International Airport, in Chantilly, Va., on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023, after some inmates considered by many to be political prisoners of the government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega arrived in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

DORAL, Fla. (AP) 鈥 A clandestine opposition movement remains active in Nicaragua, but options for restoring democracy in the Central American country are dwindling, former presidential challenger and political prisoner F茅lix Maradiaga told The Associated Press from his forced exile in the United States.

鈥淭he options are increasingly limited because the Sandinista dictatorship has radicalized,鈥 the 48-year-old academic said in an interview in the Miami suburb of Doral. 鈥淥ne can鈥檛 ask the people who already sacrificed enormously, who had killings, who had exiles or 鈥 political prisoners, to keep sacrificing more without strong support from the international community.鈥

Nicaragua鈥檚 government, led by President Daniel Ortega and his wife and co-President, Rosario Murillo, has been cracking down on dissent since , claiming they were backed by foreign powers that sought his overthrow. The government has now through 鈥渟evere human rights violations,鈥 a panel of United Nations experts warned this year.

Sanctions are no 鈥渟ilver bullet,鈥 Maradiaga said: It's also necessary to stop the global erosion of democracy, support the beleaguered political opposition inside the country, hit the channels financing Ortega's government and keep up pressure through human rights tribunals.

From child exile to presidential challenger to forced exile again

Maradiaga first fled Nicaragua for the United States in the 1980s, finding refuge with a foster family, when rebels backed by the Reagan administration fought the leftist Sandinista government. He returned but was forced to flee again as an adult after the Ortega government accused him of 鈥渇inancing鈥 the 2018 protests and a judge ordered his arrest.

and was running for president against Ortega in 2021 alongside nearly 200 others, considered political prisoners by the U.S. State Department. Maradiaga was convicted of 鈥渉arm to the national well-being,鈥 a charge also applied to many other dissidents Nicaragua's government called 鈥渢errorists.鈥 Maradiaga said at the time that he had been subjected to a political trial.

In February 2023, he was among 222 political, student and faith leaders taken from some of Nicaragua鈥檚 most notorious prisons and Shortly after, the Ortega government .

Maradiaga said he sought to challenge Ortega at the ballot 鈥 鈥渆ven knowing there would be fraud, even knowing I would have to go to jail鈥 鈥 because he wanted to show the president he couldn鈥檛 win elections fairly. The United States, European Union members and other nations .

Continuing the fight for democracy from the US

鈥淣ow my role is to help the new generations of youth, so that they can organize politically, so that there can be a political alternative, a strategy of sanctions, a strategy of human rights, an umbilical cord with Nicaragua and also a way to be able to organize those in exile in a common strategy,鈥 he said.

The work of exiles is crucial because they can be 鈥渁 voice for those who don鈥檛 have a voice,鈥 he said. They also can reach international institutions and contribute to Nicaragua鈥檚 economy 鈥 which makes the diaspora 鈥渁n important actor in the possible scenario of the rescuing of democracy,鈥 Maradiaga added.

But work like his, which also includes close contact with people who are organizing the opposition inside Nicaragua, comes at tremendous risk.

鈥淓ach time that someone in exile talks, we put at risk our family members inside the country, who are used essentially like hostages to shut us up,鈥 Maradiaga said. 鈥(The government) needs to kill hope, to create in the collective imagination the perception that there are no democratic leaders, that all the exiles are making money from it.鈥

The power of faith, which is also under attack

What keeps him going is his Catholic faith 鈥 something that the Nicaraguan government has also in the country.

鈥淲ithout my faith, I wouldn鈥檛 be alive. Without my faith, I wouldn鈥檛 have the clarity that I want 鈥 and hope 鈥 to have in my principles,鈥 Maradiaga said.

When he was first forced to flee Nicaragua as a 12-year-old, it was churches in Guatemala, Mexico and at the U.S. border that fed him 鈥 and his soul. Clergy including , now in exile in South Florida, were his guiding lights during the protests and unrest.

鈥淲hen you feel that the international community has abandoned you, that you have lost your freedom and you have no access to the state鈥檚 protection because the state has become a terrorist state, the Catholic Church became our refuge,鈥 Maradiaga said.

Throughout the hourlong interview, Maradiaga spoke of the need to keep forging ahead with hope. But tears welled up in his eyes when talking about his grandmother鈥檚 death the previous week in Matagalpa. During his last years in Nicaragua, he wasn鈥檛 able to visit her because the police prohibited him from leaving the capital even before his arrest.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the story of thousands and thousands of Nicaraguans who haven鈥檛 been able to bring flowers to their relatives鈥 graves,鈥 Maradiaga said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a truly atrocious persecution and it demonstrates, with utter clarity though in a very painful way 鈥 the level of hatred and the fracturing of the Nicaraguan family caused by the dictatorship.鈥

___

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP鈥檚 with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Giovanna Dell'orto, The Associated Press

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