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Costa Rica president wants free elections for Nicaragua

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Costa Rican President Carlos Alvarado has said Central America should not be satisfied until Nicaragua holds free elections and re-establishes a free press, democracy and human rights guarantees.

In this Monday, March 11, 2019, photo, Costa Rican president Carlos Alvarado poses for a photo before an interview with The Associated Press in Seattle, Washington

“We should not be tranquil until those (are) re-established there,” he said in an interview with The Associated Press last week during a tour of two western U.S. states. “It’s in the interest of the region that we have a political institutional solution for Nicaragua.”

Alvarado said the turmoil in Nicaragua is having a negative impact on Central American immigration and the region’s economy.

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A political standoff has lasted nearly a year between the government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and a coalition of students, businesses and civic groups called the Civic Alliance. Talks between the two sides broke down earlier this month over the government’s imprisonment of opposition members.

The alliance has not specified if it’s demanding the release of some or all of the estimated 770 people jailed by the Sandinista government following the protests that started nearly a year ago. Since the latest round of talks began in late February, the government has freed about 112 people on a form of conditional release.

Alvarado said the alliance has “a point in asking for their release, especially journalists who have been detained.”

More than 25,000 Nicaraguans have crossed the border into Costa Rica during the turmoil, according to the Costa Rican government.

During the interview, Alvarado also pledged that Costa Rica’s judicial system will fairly address sexual abuse allegations against former Costa Rican President and Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias.

At least seven women have accused Arias of sexual abuse or harassment. One of the most recent accounts came from Arias’ one-time personal trainer.

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“In Costa Rica, we profoundly believe in the judicial system,” Alvarado said. “The people accusing ex-president Arias will have legal protections.Ex-president Arias will also have the opportunity to present his defense and the courts will determine the truth.”

Alvarado said Costa Rica must recognize that machismo is still widespread in the country, but said his government is promoting gender equality.

Same-sex marriages will become automatically legal in Costa Rica in 2020 after the constitutional court ruled that a ban was illegal, but Alvarado said he expects his government to take legislative action to legalize it before that.

“We are, as a government, do everything that (same-sex marriage) is respected as a right,” he said.

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Costa Rica does not have a military and Alvarado said there should be no military intervention in Venezuela by foreign powers amid the country’s deep economic and political crisis.

Alvarado visited Washington state and California, pitching Costa Rica’s workers to tech companies like Amazon, Microsoft and Google. He said that Amazon is among the largest foreign employers in the country, accounting for more than 8,000 jobs. He also met with officials at Starbucks, which has had a long-standing relationship with Costa Rica’s coffee industry.

Alvarado promoted his country’s goal of decarbonizing its economy by 2050. That’s in contrast with current U.S. policy, with President Donald Trump repeatedly questioning climate change.

He said governments that advocate moves to prevent climate change are teaming up with allies in the private sector.

“We have to support each other in this ambitious agenda,” he said.

Article originally appeared on Today Nicaragua and is republished here with permission.

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Q24N
Q24N is an aggregator of news for Latin America. Reports from Mexico to the tip of Chile and Caribbean are sourced for our readers to find all their Latin America news in one place.

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