• Logout
  • Member Center

POLITICS IN CENTRAL AMERICA

Nicaraguans make proxy war of Honduran coup

In polarized Nicaragua, lawmakers are linking their domestic political agendas to the drama next door in Honduras -- and the specter of violence is growing.

Special to The Miami Herald

The aftershocks from the military coup that ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya on June 28 continue to rattle Nicaragua, where politicians are using the neighboring conflict as a proxy war to slug out their own internal disputes.

Though President Daniel Ortega insists a coup d'état in Nicaragua is unthinkable because of the military's Sandinista roots, the upheaval in Honduras has intensified Nicaragua's political polarization and led to a recent bout of violence in this already divided nation.

Mónica Zalaquett, director of the Center for Prevention of Violence, says the problem in Honduras has become a ``political instrument'' in Nicaragua, used by both the Sandinistas and the opposition to promote their own agendas.

``The problem of Honduras,'' she said, ``can be an opportunity to change the model of conflict resolution through dialogue, or it can be the path to total chaos and violence.''

So far, dialogue doesn't appear to be winning out.

On Aug. 4, a group of four Nicaraguan opposition lawmakers who tried to travel to the Honduran border to express their discomfort with what they called Zelaya's two-week ``occupation'' of northern Nicaragua were turned back 12 miles before the town of Ocotal. Sandinista and Zelaya supporters blocked their caravan on the highway and attacked their vehicles with sticks and rocks.

Four days later, a group of Sandinistas attacked a peaceful march in Managua and beat a journalist they accused of supporting the Honduran coup. Though the violence was strongly condemned by the Nicaraguan political opposition, business groups and the Catholic Church, Ortega justified the attack by saying the demonstrators had been ``yelling in favor of the coup.''

ADOPTING THE CAUSE

Ortega has likened the coup in Honduras to a coup against all members of the Bolivarian Alliance for the People of Our Americas (ALBA), a leftist group of countries led by Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. In the past, Ortega has said that an attack against one ALBA country is an attack against all.

Nicaraguan opposition leaders, too, have milked the situation in Honduras. They are using it to undermine Ortega's attempts to follow the ALBA model of reforming the constitution to remain in power.

``The situation that Honduras is living today is a product of the constitutional violations by Manuel Zelaya and the intervention and meddling of Hugo Chávez,'' said Nicaraguan opposition leader Eduardo Montealegre, upon returning from a trip to Honduras in late July to meet and greet the de facto government of Roberto Micheletti.

``We aren't the government and so it's not our role to recognize other governments, but as lawmakers, political leaders and Nicaraguan citizens, we recognize what happened in Honduras as a constitutional succession,'' Montealegre said.

Lawmaker María Eugenia Sequeira said the situation in Honduras is ``the first visible symptom of the abuses that Chávez is promoting in other countries.''

She said it should serve as a ``warning bell'' for what is happening in Nicaragua, too.

Opposition lawmakers have attempted to introduce a bill calling for Zelaya's expulsion from Nicaragua, which has become his de facto home base during his six weeks of exiled suitcase diplomacy. They argue Zelaya's use of Nicaraguan territory to call for insurrection in Honduras violates the constitution and is a flagrant abuse of his privileges as a guest here.

Join the discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

Comments (0)
|
  • Videos

  • Quick Job Search

Enter Keyword(s) Enter City Select a State Select a Category