[NYTr] Nicaragua Network Hotline -- July 31, 2007 Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2007 06:17:05 -0400 Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit Nicaragua Network Hotline - July 31, 2007 http://www.nicanet.org Topics covered in this week's Hotline include: 1. President Ortega accuses US government of conspiracy 2. Union Fenosa says agreement with government is imminent while Ortega ups his criticisms 3. Controversy over Councils of Citizen Power continues 4. Ortega says that government won't confiscate property or carry out evictions 5. Government asks donors to make international aid more effective 1: President Ortega accuses US government of conspiracy On Jul. 21, at a meeting of the Sao Paulo Forum in Managua, Daniel Ortega accused the US government of conspiring with representatives of the Nicaraguan opposition and the Nicaraguan media against the Sandinista government. According to Ortega his government has "clear evidence" that the US Embassy in Managua "is providing the funds and giving orientations to these groups which claim to represent the people." Ortega believes that the principle objective of this low intensity intervention is to "confuse the population and undermine .. [and] boycott government programs" such as Zero Hunger and the Councils of Citizen Power (CPCs). Ortega said that officials at the US Embassy are "undeniably" conspiring against his government. "They pay people to go on protest marches, they finance television spots, they buy whole pages in the newspapers ... We mustn't be complacent," he went on, "They are permanently conspiring against governments ideologically opposed to them. [But] the empire will have to disappear. One day we will wake up to the surprise of a revolution within the US." During the Nicaragua Network's June 2006 delegation to investigate the US government's $12- $13 million interference in the presidential election, the delegation met with the International Republican Institute (IRI). The IRI is one of the four core groups of the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and receives money as well from the US Agency for International Development. IRI, as well as its two principal funders, fund "civil society" organizations that support US interests. The IRI staff person proudly told the Nicanet delegation that they had created Movement for Nicaragua which organized demonstrations against the "pact" between the FSLN and Constitutional Liberal Party. Meanwhile, on Jul. 23 Vice President Jaime Morales accompanied US Ambassador Paul Trivelli on a visit to the USNS Comfort hospital ship of the US Southern Command currently anchored in the harbor of the port of Corinto, Chinandega. The ship was stationed at Corinto until Jul. 30 while a group of specialist physicians attended members of the public. During the visit Morales Carazo expressed the Nicaraguan government's "permanent gratitude ... for this type of... fraternal action." The Vice President even went on to say that he believes US - Nicaraguan relations are getting closer every day. 2: Union Fenosa says agreement with government is imminent while Ortega ups his criticisms On July 30 the spokesman for the Spanish multinational corporation Union Fenosa, Jorge Katin, announced that an agreement with the government which guarantees that the company will continue distributing electricity in Nicaragua has now been drafted and will be signed soon. Since Jul. 16 representatives of the government and the energy sector have been negotiating in an attempt to find a short or medium term solution to the energy crisis which is causing so much damage to the national economy. According to Katin the agreement could be signed as soon as Aug. 1 during Union Fenosa President Pedro Honorato Lspez Jiminez's visit to Nicaragua. Katin says that the agreement includes the suspension of the arbitration process against the company promoted by the government. President Daniel Ortega meanwhile upped his criticisms of Union Fenosa on July 28 and gave no indication as to when the signing of an agreement with the company will take place. At an event in Somoto, Ortega said that Fenosa's behavior has been "shameful" and that as a result of the company's "inflexible and insensitive [stance] ... no advances have been made" in the negotiation process. In other news relating to the energy sector, the social movement "Another World is Possible" together with a number of other civil society organizations began a series of activities which aimed to activate the population in their opposition to Union Fenosa on Jul. 30. The movements involved in organizing the resistance to Union Fenosa in Nicaragua demand that the contract between the government and the company be canceled and that the company be forced to leave the country. 3: Controversy over Councils of Citizen Power continues The controversy created by the opposition and the media over the Councils of Citizen Power (CPCs) continued this week with claims that President Daniel Ortega is planning to give the CPCs functions and responsibilities which have no legal basis. According to journalist Nestor Marin, the two right wing parties (the Constitutional Liberal Party, PLC, and the Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance, ALN) could even manage to overcome their deep rooted differences in order to form a united front against the CPCs and destroy the project even before it is fully implemented. The CPCs are a key aspect of the Ortega Administration's agenda and have been promoted by the government as mediums through which "direct democracy" will evolve. Although details about the exact role the CPCs will play at a local and national level have still not been revealed, it seems that Ortega plans to install a system of citizen participation similar to that of the Bolivarian Circles in Venezuela or the Popular Power Assemblies in Cuba. In other words, local groups of citizens are elected by their communities to represent them before government bodies and agencies, to present communal problems to the appropriate authorities and to help coordinate any government projects or programs involving their communities. The idea behind this form of citizen participation is that members of any given community are likely to be better at and more dedicated to solving problems affecting that community. Both of Nicaragua's daily newspapers, El Nuevo Diario and La Prensa, as well as right wing TV channels such as Canal 2 seem intent on creating popular opposition to the CPCs by publishing damning articles about the government program. El Nuevo Diario, for example, published an article on July 27 called "The Citizen Terror Counsels" by Rodolfo Perez Garcia, in which it is made out that the CPCs are an attempt by the Ortega administration to take control of events at grassroots level so as to take revenge on all those opposed to the FSLN. Perez describes the CPCs as an "absurd monstrosity of citizen power" but he doesn't say on what evidence his opinions are based. Government adviser and sociologist Orlando Nuqez believes that the success or failure of the implementation of the CPCs is key to the ideological struggle the government must win in order to guarantee future FSLN electoral victories. Despite having won the presidency Nuqez says that the FSLN "is still in the opposition. We have a socialist government administering a capitalist system and governing a neo liberal society." According to Nuqez, the ongoing hate campaign against the FSLN government is aimed at preventing the FSLN from changing the neo liberal system imposed on Nicaragua 16 years ago. But, says Nuqez, with the implementation of the CPCs, that system "could begin to topple." So far 6,334 CPCs made up of 500,388 individuals have been formed. Government spokesperson Rosario Murillo said that by September 14 a total of 16,957 CPCs consisting of close to 1,000,000 members will have been formed. 4: Ortega says that government won't confiscate property or carry out evictions "Private property will be completely protected [during my administration]" stated President Daniel Ortega on Jul. 28. "The time when the revolution confiscated property and carried out evictions is passed," he added. Ortega said that he has ordered the police not to carry out evictions of peasant families and cooperatives which have occupied land for several years without the proper legal documents. The President said his government plans to facilitate the legal documentation for those families and cooperatives in such situations. Ortega made these comments during a political- cultural event in Somoto. As a demonstration of his promise to facilitate legal documentation for property holders Ortega gave out 761 land deeds to cooperatives and families during the event. Later the same day he gave out another 374 land deeds during a similar event in Palacaguina. The cooperatives also received tractors and other agricultural tools and materials which were sent by the Venezuelan government as part of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) agreement. 5: Government asks donors to make international aid more effective On Jul. 24 representatives of the National Budget Support Group, made up of diplomats from Germany, Finland, Norway, the Netherlands, the UK, Sweden, Switzerland, the World Bank, the Interamerican Development Bank and the European Commission, met with government officials to discuss the effectiveness of the international aid given by this group to Nicaragua. According to Presidential Technical Secretary Rodolfo Delgado the government officials told the donors that in order to combat poverty Nicaragua needs "at least" US$1 billion a year (in 2006 the National Budget Support Group donated US$750 million). Delgado went on to say that as well as more money being required, the money needs to be used more effectively. "International aid must be restructured" in order to be effective, said Delgado. For example, he went on, less should be spent on consultations, workshops and investigations into areas about which sufficient research already exists. On top of this access to resources and opportunities should become more democratic. These steps, he said, would allow international aid money and resources to reach those who need it most. This hotline is prepared from the Nicaragua News Service and other sources. To receive a more extensive weekly summary of the news from Nicaragua by e-mail or postal service, send a check for $60.00 to Nicaragua Network, 1247 E St., SE, Washington, DC 20003. We can be reached by phone at 202-544-9355. Our web site is: www.nicanet.org. 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