Central America
Jailed Nicaragua opposition leader moved to house arrest over health fears
AFP
Nicaraguan former deputy foreign minister Victor Hugo Tinoco, jailed along with several other opponents of the regime of President Daniel Ortega, has been moved to house arrest due to health problems, a human rights organization reported Tuesday.
Tinoco, 69, “is at home with some relatives, all incommunicado,” said the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (Cenidh), which tracks the judicial processes of opposition figures due to a lack of official information.
“The authorities must clarify his health situation, which was a cause for concern after the serious risk to his life in El Chipote (prison) was disclosed,” Cenidh said on social media.
In addition to Tinoco, six other imprisoned opponents who are elderly and have health conditions have been placed under house arrest.
Tinoco, who fought alongside Ortega as guerillas battling the Somoza dictatorship, was arrested in June and sentenced to 13 years in prison for “undermining national integrity.”
Tinoco split with Ortega two decades ago due to differences in the running of the leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).
He and more than 40 opposition figures, including seven presidential candidates, were arrested in 2021 and sentenced to terms ranging from eight to 13 years.
Central America
Arévalo warns of ‘Dark Interests’ targeting human rights defenders in Guatemala
Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo de León warned on Thursday that human rights defenders are facing serious threats, aggression, and criminalization by “dark interests” embedded within the structures of the State.
“Today we are facing serious levels of threats, aggression, and criminalization against people who promote respect for human rights, coming from actors and criminal networks—sometimes embedded in State institutions—that refuse to accept that Guatemala is changing,” Arévalo said during a public event held at the former Government Palace.
During the event, authorities presented the Public Policy for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders 2025–2035, an initiative developed in compliance with a 2014 resolution from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR), issued in response to the killing of activist Florentín Gudiel Ramos in 2004.
Central America
Newborn found in Costa Rican dump survives two days in unsanitary conditions
Costa Rican media outlets report that a newborn baby was found in a garbage dump, where he had reportedly spent two days in unsanitary conditions.
Police located the infant after a resident alerted authorities upon hearing crying coming from a clandestine dumping site in the Rancho Guanacaste area. The newborn was discovered alive inside a drainage channel, covered in waste. He was immediately taken to the National Children’s Hospital, where he received medical care and is now in stable condition.
“The National Children’s Hospital confirms that we indeed received a newborn approximately four or five days old who was found in a wooded area near the Alajuelita roundabout. He was first taken to the Solón Núñez Clinic and then transferred to this hospital. As of now, the baby is in the emergency department in good condition. He arrived a bit cold, but he has been warmed, fed, and his initial physical exam is completely normal,” explained hospital director Carlos Jiménez Herrera, according to CR Hoy.
Central America
Arévalo accuses Porras and judge of undermining democracy in Guatemala
Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo denounced a new attempt at a “coup” orchestrated by the Attorney General’s Office. He also requested an extraordinary session at the Organization of American States (OAS) to address the country’s ongoing political crisis.
The president has been at odds with Attorney General Consuelo Porras, who has been sanctioned by the United States and the European Union for being “corrupt” and “anti-democratic.” Since 2023, Arévalo has accused Porras of launching investigations against his party, Semilla, and the 2023 elections as part of a scheme to prevent his inauguration in January 2024.
From the presidential office, Arévalo has said he continues to “resist” the “coup plotters,” but tensions escalated last Friday when Judge Fredy Orellana, at the request of the Attorney General’s Office, ordered the electoral court to annul the Semilla party’s promoter group. Arévalo interpreted this as an attempt to revoke the positions won by the party.
“Orellana, a hitman who distorts the law in service of Consuelo Porras, is attempting to force […] the unconstitutional removal of a mayor, 23 elected deputies […], the vice president, and the president of the country,” Arévalo said in a televised address on Sunday.
“We call on the international community not to turn a blind eye to the coup being attempted in Guatemala,” he added, speaking alongside his cabinet and congressional members at the National Palace in Guatemala City.
Arévalo requested that the Organization of American States hold an extraordinary session to present “the serious threats” to the Guatemalan Constitution and democracy perpetrated by Porras and Orellana.
Yesterday, Guatemalan Foreign Minister Carlos Ramiro Martínez reaffirmed the president’s statements, emphasizing the need “to go and expose the situation” Guatemala has been facing since last week due to the actions of the Attorney General’s Office.
-
International4 days agoVenezuela accuses U.S. of using Naval Deployment to pressure Maduro government
-
Central America2 days agoArévalo warns of ‘Dark Interests’ targeting human rights defenders in Guatemala
-
Sin categoría4 days agoConvicted gang member challenges Guatemala’s anti-gang law, citing Human Rights Violations
-
Central America3 days agoNewborn found in Costa Rican dump survives two days in unsanitary conditions
-
International2 days agoColombia reaches $4.5 billion deal to acquire 17 Gripen Fighter Jets from Saab
-
International24 hours agoOmbudsman confirms deaths of six minors in bombing targeting FARC dissidents



























