Since last year, almost 50 political opposition leaders have been held in prison or house arrest in Nicaragua by its strongman leader. On Tuesday their trials began 鈥 and few people expect them to be fair.
Authoritarian Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega began arresting those opposition figures last summer and sent most of them to the notorious El Chipote prison in Managua.
They included all the candidates who sought to run against him in last November鈥檚 presidential election 鈥 and they were charged with treason, which under Nicaraguan law today literally means challenging Ortega.
Nicaraguan human rights activists say the defendants鈥 convictions are all but preordained.
鈥淭his whole thing is just a sham, just a farce," said Nicaraguan expat Claudio Acevedo of Miami.
"These trials are being held in the jails itself, not even in a court setting. They鈥檙e not being allowed to have any of the human rights attorneys get anywhere near these proceedings.鈥
Acevedo and other rights advocates believe once Ortega has convicted his opponents, he鈥檒l use them as leverage with the U.S. and other countries 鈥 who have called his victory in the November election 鈥渋llegitimate.鈥
鈥淗e wants to use these political prisoners as a bargaining chip to create pressure in the international community to lift sanctions,鈥 Acevedo said.
The U.S. Congress, using the new RENACER Act, is studying whether to ratchet up economic sanctions against the Ortega regime by booting Nicaragua from the U.S.鈥檚 free trade agreement with Central America, known as CAFTA.