Church says govt forces kill two on Nicaragua day of protest

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Pro-government Sandinista youths celebrate the 39th anniversary of the Sandinista military maneuver "El Repliegue" (The Retreat), in the municipality of Nindiri in Masaya, some 35 km from Managua, on July 13, 2018 as the opposition holds a 24-hour general strike. Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and his supporters began a procession from the capital to the opposition stronghold of Masaya to commemorate a significant event in the president's coming to power in 1979, known as the "The Retreat". The military maneuver allowed the Sandinista guerrilla forces to regroup and later overthrow the dictatorship of Anastasio Somoza in 1979. / AFP PHOTO / Inti OCON

MANAGUA: Government forces in Nicaragua shot dead two young men at a protest site at a church, the clergy said, the latest violence to hit the Central American country that has convulsed with political unrest for three months.
The attack took place on the third day of nationwide demonstrations against President Daniel Ortega, a former revolutionary hero now accused of authoritarianism.
Political tensions have soared since protests against a now-aborted pension reform began on April 18 and spiraled into general opposition to Ortega and his government, with at least 270 killed in clashes.
“They were shooting to kill,” one young protester told reporters at the Managua Cathedral on Saturday, where students were taken after fleeing the besieged parish church. “It was very hard. They had high-caliber weapons and we had only (homemade) mortars.”
“Bullets were whistling over our heads… They even tried to burn the church with people inside,” a student who used the nom de guerre El Negro told AFP.
In Managua, hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets demanding justice and early elections.
“Ortega wants us down on our knees. But he has not realized that this already has gone so much farther than any amount of fear we could have,” said activist Azahalea Solis.
The latest events followed a general strike on Friday and a peaceful procession by thousands on Thursday.
“They are telling us that we have two dead and several wounded,” Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes said upon reaching the besieged parish with Vatican envoy Stanislaw Waldemar Sommertag.
“This hurts us a lot,” he added.
The events brought widespread condemnation and calls for an end to the violence, including from the new socialist government in Spain, the secretary-general of the Organization of American States, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, and officials of the US, Brazil and Chile.
Madrid’s foreign ministry called for an inquiry into all the deaths since April 18.
After a night of gunfire and fear at the church compound, the religious leaders mediated the release of dozens of students.
Waving Nicaraguan flags and with their fists raised, the freed students passed hundreds of supporters cheering on the road as motorists honked horns.
“Long live the students!” they shouted.
Church leaders reported about 20 people wounded.
The Episcopal Conference of Nicaragua later issued a statement accusing the government of being insincere in its stated desire to hold dialogue as a means of achieving a resolution.
The students had been encamped at the parish since Friday and came under attack late that night following an assault on the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua next door, a bastion of resistance.
Students have been holed up at the university since the protests began, and a medic reported several injuries after pro-government forces opened fire.
Also Saturday, an opposition leader accused government forces of attacking protesting civilians in the central rural municipality of San Pedro de Lovago after they had tried to block a road.