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Daniel Ortega bans the Jesuit order in Nicaragua

The Society of Jesus protested the closure, calling it illegal, and assured that the onslaught is another step in the march of Sandinismo towards a totalitarian regime.

Daniel Ortega's regime has imprisoned three priests for political reasons

Daniel Ortega / Cordon Press

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The Government of Nicaragua has cancelled the legal status of the Association of the Society of Jesuits of Nicaragua. The order, shared in the official gazette on Wednesday, it lays out in detail how the assets of the association will also be confiscated, and which will pass to the state coffers.

The regime of Daniel Ortega has accused the Jesuit order of breaking the law by not renewing its board of directors for four years, and for not reporting financial records for the fiscal periods of 2020, 2021 and 2022. According to the Government:

By not reporting its financial statements fiscal periods 2020, 2021 and 2022, and its Board of Directors, it hinders the control and surveillance of that Directorate, not promoting transparency policies in the administration and management of the Association, ignoring the activities they carry out, the execution of their projects and if they are in accordance with their objectives and purposes.

The provision was issued by the Minister of the Interior of the Republic, María Amelia Coronel Kinloch.

Jesuit Response

From the Society of Jesus they condemned "this new aggression against the Jesuits of Nicaragua." They also assured that it is another step in Ortega's march towards a totalitarian regime.

They also noted that the legal requirements for similar procedures were not met. They did not have the opportunity to defend themselves and there was no hearing before an impartial judge. Nothing new in Nicaragua: there has been three thousand cases of cancellation of legal status in unconventional circumstances since 2018, they said in the statement.

After hearing the news, Republican Congresswoman, María Elvira Salazar, said she would work to add the Nicaraguan ruling party to the annual list of Entities of Particular Concern.

If his promise is kept, the secretary of state would label the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) as a non-state agent that "committed especially serious violations of religious freedom." It would share ranks with groups such as Boko Haram, Isis, the Taliban and the Wagner group.

The designation would be a more direct attack on the Ortega-Murillo regime, as the country is on last year's list of Countries of Particular Concern:

Burma, People's Republic of China, Cuba, Eritrea, Iran, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.

One more blow to Catholicism

In mid-August, Ortega had dealt a first blow to the Pope's order by confiscating the Central American University (UCA). And this was not the first so far this year: the dictator banned processions, suspended institutional relations with the Vatican and froze the bank accounts of the Catholic Church after accusing it of money laundering.

He also arrested several religious such as Bishop Rolando Álvarez, three priests and two seminarians.

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