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Nicaragua apologises over MEP incident

Published on 12 November 2009 - 10:10pm
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The Nicaraguan government has apologised to The Hague after an incident involving Dutch Euro MP Hans van Baalen. The right-wing Liberal urged Nicaragua's opposition to unite and to refuse to co-operate with the Ortega government.

 

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega ordered the expulsion after the VVD politician called on the left-wing president to respect the constitution, saying, "Ortega is trying to bypass this article in the constitution illegally. The violation of civil rights is not just a national matter that can be ignored".
 

Last month, the Nicaragua Supreme Court scrapped the constitutional provision barring a president serving more than one term. The change effectively allows Mr Ortega, a former Sandinista revolutionary, to run for re-election in 2011.
 

The Dutch MEP was recently elected president of the International Liberals, an umbrella group representing more 100 liberal political parties across the globe, and is on a three-nation tour of Central America. He has been working hard behind the scenes to unite Nicaragua's Liberal parties, who have a majority in parliament but are divided by political infighting, to forget their differences and present a single candidate to run against President Ortega.
 

On Wednesday, Mr van Baalen held a press conference and told reporters he had been invited to leave the country by the Ortega government. Later, Nicaragua's Deputy Foreign Minister Manuel Coronel Kautz referred to Mr van Baalen as German and when informed that he was Dutch, the deputy minister said "that's even worse because the Netherlands is a paisucho (a shitty little country)".
 

President Ortega's government has apologised for Deputy Minister Coronel's comments but not for expelling Mr van Baalen as he "came as an envoy of interventionist foreign powers, forgetting that the new forms of interference and oppression are rejected by the people, especially in Africa, Asia and Latin America".

 

  • Presidencia de la Republica del Ecuador/Flickr
  • VVD MEP Hans van Baalen
    Wikimedia Commons

Discussion

Anonymous 13 November 2009 - 10:36am
Remarkable -- as a Canadian, I am all to aware that Canadian politicians and government agencies often seek to interfere with the political decision-making of peoples in poorer countries. In countries such as Haiti, and - more recently - Honduras, the Government of Canada has demonstrated contempt for the principle of national self-determination by tacitly or directly backing a government established through coup d'etat. But I am shocked that the current Dutch government is so open in demonstrating this same contempt. It is up to Nicaraguans - not Dutch politicians - to decide on the content of their own constitution. It is unconscionable that well-financed organizations directed by rich-country politicians should be engaged in "organizing" the political opposition of a foreign country. Imagine the reverse -- Nicaraguan politicians attempting to "organize" the political opposition of the Netherlands into a more effective force! Shame on Hans van Baalen and his co-conspirators.
Anonymous 13 November 2009 - 8:19pm
That would be true if Nicaragua were a truly democratic country with a separation of powers as opposed to a country whereby the President, under his party's flag, controls and mandates all facets of government in order to remain in power. When a country's leader is censuring and attacking the media when opposed to his mandate and is in the process of dismantling the democratic process, it is then up to world leaders to express themselves in an international forum which Mr. Johannes Cornelis van Baalen did.

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