-
Israel court extends detention of two Gaza flotilla activists
-
Massive search continues for two missing US soldiers in Morocco
-
Players keep up battle with tennis majors as they decry Roland Garros prize money
-
Pistons rout Magic to complete comeback, advance in NBA playoffs
-
Trump says US and Iran in 'positive' talks, unveils plan to escort Hormuz ships
-
Talisman Endrick fires resurgent Lyon into third in France
-
Verstappen laments spin and struggle for pace in Miami
-
Teen Antonelli wins again in Miami to extend title race lead
-
Ferrari's Leclerc admits he threw away Miami podium finish
-
Cristian Chivu, a winner with Inter on the pitch and in the dugout
-
Key players from Inter Milan's Serie A title triumph
-
No.4 Young cruises to PGA title at Doral
-
Vinicius double delays Barca title as Real Madrid down Espanyol
-
Inter Milan win Italian title for third time in six seasons
-
Spurs solved mental frailty to boost survival bid: De Zerbi
-
Miami champ Antonelli shrugs off success, vows 'back to work'
-
Man Utd beat Liverpool, Spurs climb out of relegation zone
-
Spurs out of relegation zone after vital win at Villa
-
No.1 Korda cruises to LPGA Mexico crown
-
Thompson-Herah shines at world relays, Tebogo helps Botswana to win
-
Three die on Atlantic cruise ship from suspected hantavirus: WHO
-
Germany's Merz says not 'giving up on working with Donald Trump'
-
Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli wins Miami Grand Prix
-
Man Utd job feels 'natural' to Carrick
-
Ferguson taken to hospital before Man Utd win against Liverpool
-
'Devil Wears Prada 2' takes top spot in N. America box office
-
Iran weighs US response to peace plan after warning against military action
-
Gladbach sink Dortmund, St Pauli edge closer to drop
-
Rubio to visit Rome, meet Pope Leo after Trump row
-
Kyiv hits Russian oil sites as eight killed in both countries
-
Iran says US military operation 'impossible' as Trump mulls peace proposal
-
Man Utd beat Liverpool to secure Champions League place
-
Two die in 'respiratory illness' outbreak on Atlantic cruise ship
-
Barcelona sink Bayern to reach women's Champions League final
-
True Love lands eighth English 1000 Guineas for O'Brien
-
Sinner dismantles Zverev to win Madrid Open, set record
-
Brilliant Bordeaux clean out Bath to reach Champions Cup final
-
Second unexploded shell found at illegal French rave: minister
-
Bournemouth eye European place after crushing Palace
-
Pogacar ends dominant Tour of Romandie with fourth win
-
Chakravarthy, Narine help Kolkata stay alive in IPL
-
Daughter says Maradona died after carers' plan 'went out of control'
-
Two women suffocate on migrant boat seeking to reach UK
-
How Schalke returned to the Bundesliga after their 'worst season ever'
-
Two women die on migrant boat seeking to reach UK
-
Mumbai coach Jayawardene backs Suryakumar to find his 'rhythm'
-
Under full moon, Shakira thrills 2 million fans on Rio's Copacabana beach
-
Bangkok food vendor curbs push city staple from the streets
-
More Nepalis drive electric, evading global fuel shocks
-
Latecomer Japan eyes slice of rising global defence spending
Nicaragua ramping up repression of exiles: UN experts
While ramping up its repression at home, Nicaragua's government is also going after exiles abroad, with hundreds if not thousands of people affected, UN investigators said Tuesday.
In a fresh report to be presented to the United Nations Human Rights Council next week, the experts also concluded that husband-and-wife co-presidents Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo, and other top officials, were "responsible for serious, systematic and widespread human rights violations".
Those violations, including "some amounting to crimes against humanity", were being committed "against a broadening segment of the population", the report warned.
The Nicaraguan government "has formalised repression through constitutional and legislative reforms, enabling generalised impunity by blocking any form of accountability and exposing victims and justice-seekers to severe reprisals", it said.
The independent UN Group of Human Rights Experts on Nicaragua, which was created by the rights council in 2022 to investigate allegations of widespread abuses in the country, highlighted the growing targeting of Nicaraguans in exile.
"The extension of the repression beyond the borders of Nicaragua has affected the lives of hundreds -- if not thousands -- of exiled Nicaraguans and their in-country relatives and associates," the report said.
- 'Stateless' -
The experts said that since 2023, the government has deprived 452 Nicaraguans of their nationality, while rendering possibly thousands of other exiles "de facto stateless" by refusing to renew or provide necessary documents, and barring many from re-entering the country.
The team of experts, who were mandated by the rights council but do not speak on behalf of the United Nations, also highlighted reports of "at least a dozen cases of killings or attempted killings of exiled critics".
One of them was Major Roberto Samcam, an exiled retired Nicaraguan army officer and fierce government critic, "who was shot eight times in his home in San Jose (Costa Rica) on June 19, 2025", the report said.
The preliminary investigation, the experts pointed out, "indicates that the homicide was carefully planned, following prior surveillance and threats against the victim, and bore the hallmarks of a contract killing".
The experts charged that Nicaragua's government was financing its expanding repression of opponents through the illegal diversion of public funds, creating a vast transnational surveillance and intelligence network.
That network had been used to monitor, intimidate and attack many of the hundreds of thousands of Nicaraguans who live abroad, the report found.
"Repression and institutional corruption have become the governing method in Nicaragua under the control of the Ortega-Murillo family," Jan-Michael Simon, who chairs the team, said in a statement.
"Political persecution is financed by the state, executed through its institutions, and extended across borders to ensure that no-one -- absolutely no-one -- stands in the way of the regime," he said.
- Ensure accountability -
The investigators, who said they relied on dozens of interviews and extensive documentary evidence for their report, found that government funding earmarked for social assistance and operational expenses had been "redirected to fund violent security operations".
They also highlighted allegations from a dozen sources that current co-foreign minister Valdrack Ludwing Jaentschke Whitaker had helped direct and coordinate transnational repression efforts while he served in senior diplomatic positions from 2021-2023.
"Diplomatic and consular structures have been instrumentalised to track, monitor and intimidate exiled Nicaraguans," team member Ariela Peralta said.
"This is a deliberate policy to eliminate dissent wherever it may be."
The experts called on Nicaragua's government to "take immediate steps to dismantle the architecture of repression", and to "ensure accountability, restore civic space, and take meaningful measures to guarantee the rights of all Nicaraguans, including those in exile".
L.Miller--AMWN