NEW YORK – Archbishop Thomas Wenski of Miami has said Nicaragua’s dictatorship has gone “off the rails” with the latest round of arrests of Catholic leaders in Nicaragua and the continued imprisonment of Bishop Rolando Álvarez of Matagalpa.
“It’s a deteriorating situation where the government is persecuting the church, and it’s hard to see what the end game of this is,” Wenski said of Nicaragua in a Jan. 2 television interview with WPLG Local 10 News, adding that “this is a dictatorship, to be sure, it’s also one that’s off the rails”.
Wenski has close ties to Nicaragua due to south Florida’s proximity to the Caribbean nation, and the fact that Miami has the largest Nicaraguan population of any U.S. city. Last year, a number of political prisoners released by the Nicaraguan government and flown to the U.S. settled in Miami, with Wenski offering them long-term housing at a local seminary.
The latest news out of Nicaragua came in the final weeks of 2023, when the Ortega regime heightened its crackdown on local Catholic leaders. Bishop Isidoro del Carmen Mora Ortega of Siuna was arrested on his way to celebrate a local confirmation on 20 December. According to local reports, the arrest came the day after a Mass during which he said the nation’s Catholic bishops’ conference is united in prayer for Álvarez.
In addition to Mora, 15 priests and two seminarians were arrested in the final days of 2023.
On 2 January, the U.S. State Department issued a statement condemning the Ortega regime.
“In addition to Bishop Álvarez, many religious leaders remain unjustly detained in Nicaragua, including fellow Bishop Isidoro Mora and several priests,” the statement declared. “The Ortega-Murillo regime continues to impose severe restrictions on religious communities and deny Nicaraguan citizens the ability to freely practice their religions and express their beliefs.”
The statement notes that Álvarez has been “unjustly incarcerated” for more than 500 days. It adds that during that time the Nicaraguan authorities have kept him in isolation and blocked any independent evaluation of the conditions of his imprisonment. It also highlights that staged photographs and videos of Álvarez published by the Nicaraguan government “only increase concerns about his well-being”.
“We once again call on the Nicaraguan government to release Bishop Rolando Álvarez immediately and without conditions,” the State Department said.
Photographs were recently published of Álvarez receiving a medical checkup. Commenting on the photos, Nicaraguan Auxiliary Bishop Silvio José Báez of Managua – who is currently in Miami, where he has been since he was exiled in 2019 – said that no one is fooled by the images into believing Álvarez is being treated humanely.
“May the dictatorship not think it cleans its crime by staging Bishop Rolando Álvarez in a new cynical, and disrespectful setup,” Báez said in a statement. “Understand that no one believes them! The only just thing is for Bishop Álvarez to be released, along with Bishop I. Mora, seminarians, and priests.”
The Nicaraguan government has not said anything on Álvarez or the other arrests.
Last February, Álvarez was sentenced to 26 years in prison by the Nicaraguan government. He also incurred a loss of citizenship and was given a large fine based on charges of treason, undermining national integrity and spreading false news.
The Ortega regime has continually taken actions against Catholics since 2018, when widespread protests against the government broke out.
Wenski also spoke on Nicaragua in his homily at a Christmas Mass, listing it among a group of countries that seem without hope as their citizens continue to flee.
“Haiti, Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, countries near to us – and certainly, dear to many of us – are seemingly without hope as hundreds of thousands flee,” Wenski said.
Photo: Nicaraguans attending a shrine to the Virgin Maria de la Concepcion during ‘La Griteria’ celebrations in her honour in Nicaragua’s capital city, Managua, 7 December 2023. (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images.)
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