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Nicaragua's police spread fear with arrests, raids

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - It was around 10:30 p.m. on a Sunday night when journalist Verónica Chávez heard a loud noise as she put her son to bed. She looked out to see her husband Miguel Mora frantically trying to open the door to their home as members of Nicaragua's police tried to kick it in.

Mora, a presidential hopeful and the former director of the news outlet 100% Noticias, shouted for the police to stop kicking so he could open the door for them.

'œThey were shouting, kicking and Miguel was trying to open the door and was saying '~Here I am,''ť Chávez said through tears. 'œThey said '~come out,' but as he was going to open they didn't stop kicking the door.'ť

Mora was arrested in 2018 as well, and jailed for nearly six months as Ortega's government violently put down street protests that he says were an attempted coup.

During the past month, President Daniel Ortega's police have rounded up some 20 opposition figures, including five presidential hopefuls like Mora, and raided the homes of others. Often the police would arrive at night with overwhelming force - in Mora's case 7 to 10 patrol vehicles - insult their targets and their families, break windows and doors. They grab electronics: cell phones, computers, external memory drives, cameras.

Families are not told where the detainees are taken. They are not given access to lawyers. Most of the charges concern vague allegations of crimes against the state, usually involving the acceptance of foreign funding. In most cases, the police put out public statements about the latest arrest and the intimidation and fear spread.

A week before police grabbed Mora, Víctor Hugo Tinoco had gone out to dinner with two of his children at the Galerias mall in Managua. Around 9 p.m. he was getting into his car when police descended on them.

'œTen masked men grabbed him, put him in a truck and took him,'ť his daughter Arlen Tinoco said. Police snatched her cell phone away and threatened to hit her as she tried to film the arrest.

Three days later, police came to Tinoco's home. 'œThey wanted to jump the gates, they shouted and threatened to break them down,'ť said Deyanira Parrales, Tinoco's wife. She asked them to be respectful and not be violent.

Two of their daughters received police in the house praying and holding up a crucifix. 'œSan Miguel archangel, drive away evil demons,'ť Parrales said her daughters chanted. The police did not damage their home. Still, Parrales said, 'œThose were the worst hours of my life.'ť

When the police came for Dora María Téllez and Ana Margarita Vijil, two leaders of the opposition party, Unamos, there were more than 60 riot police securing the perimeter, according to a statement from relatives. Police broke down doors and roughly handled the women. Téllez had been a Sandinista guerrilla with Ortega before splitting with him years ago.

'œThe logic in democratic countries is that first they investigate and then they arrest, but we're getting closer and closer to Cuba, Venezuela and North Korea,'ť said lawyer and opposition figure José Pallais, after the initial arrests early this month. On June 9, police arrested Pallais at his home in Leon.

The police did not find former Education Minister Humberto Belli when they broke through his home's front gate and disabled the home's security cameras, according to an account he published Monday in La Prensa. His wife told them he was out of the country and prayed while police searched the house for the next four hours.

The next day, Belli's wife and daughter were sleeping when the dog barked. His daughter opened a door to let it out and at that moment at least six men dressed in black and wearing masks forced their way inside. One carried a rifle, the others knives, according to Belli.

Again, they asked for Belli. Then they asked where he had his guns. His wife told them the police had already searched the house and one of the men said this was a 'œsecond operation.'ť

The men forced the women to hand over all of their jewelry and cell phones. They ransacked the house. At one point, one man tried to rape Belli's daughter, but was stopped by another.

After an hour and a half, as Belli's wife began to tremble, the men left. Belli's sister, the writer Gioconda Belli said via Twitter: 'œI don't know how to describe this horror.'ť

'œI am aware that what my family suffered pales beside what many others have suffered, but I think it is important to document the tribulations that so many families in today's Nicaragua continue suffering,'ť Humberto Belli wrote. 'œTo remain silent could be a way to lie and cover up the abuses.'ť

FILE - In this May 2, 2018 file photo, retired Sandinista Gen. Hugo Torres poses for a portrait at his home in Managua, Nicaragua. Nicaraguan police arrested Torres, a prominent ex-Sandinista dissident on Sunday, June 13, 2021, bringing to six the number detained over the weekend, the biggest one-day roundup so far in President Daniel Ortega's campaign to jail anyone who might challenge his rule. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Jan. 28, 2014 file photo, opposition legislator Victor Hugo Tinoco, of the Sandinista Renewal Movement (MRS) gestures before the National Assembly votes to amend the Nicaraguan Constitution to include eliminating presidential term limits in Managua, Nicaragua. Nicaraguan police arrested Tinoco, the leader of the political movement Unamos, late Sunday, June 13, 2021, bringing to six the number detained over the weekend, the biggest one-day roundup so far in President Daniel Ortega's campaign to jail anyone who might challenge his rule. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Sept. 18, 2019 file photo, Nicaraguan opposition activist Felix Maradiaga, center, stands at attention as the national anthem is sung during a press conference in Managua, Nicaragua. Nicaragua's National Police has on Tuesday, June 8, 2021, arrested Maradiaga, a potential challenger to President Daniel Ortega, the third opposition pre-candidate for the Nov. 7 elections detained in the past week. (AP Photo/Alfredo Zuniga, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Aug. 21, 2005 file photo, Former Sandinista revolutionary commander Dora Maria Tellez, president of the Sandinista Renewal Movement or MRS, speaks during the party meeting to announce former Managua Mayor Herty Lewites as its presidential candidate for 2006 elections in Managua, Nicaragua. Nicaraguan police arrested Tellez, a prominent ex-Sandinista dissident on Sunday, June 13, 2021, bringing to six the number detained over the weekend, the biggest one-day roundup so far in President Daniel Ortega's campaign to jail anyone who might challenge his rule. (AP Photo/Ariel Leon, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Nov. 7, 2004 file photo, then mayoral candidate Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Barrios and his mother, former Nicaraguan President Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, show their thumbs stained with indelible ink after casting their votes, in Managua, Nicaragua. Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Barrios, also a former congressman, was arrested late Friday, June 25, 2021, accused of acts against 'œthe sovereignty and independence' of Nicaragua, according to authorities. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix) The Associated Press
A man watches a televised national address by Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, at his home in Managua, Nicaragua, Wednesday, June 23, 2021. The president of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Antonia Urrejola says that Nicaragua has entered a new phase of repression with at least 20 opposition figures arrested in recent weeks and "constant human rights violations." (AP Photo/Miguel Andres) The Associated Press
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