Using the law to intimidate

 

 

The president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, through his puppets in the Judicial Branch of that country, ordered the exile of 222 political prisoners, illegally detained, just because they oppose his government. According to a ruling by the Court of Appeals of that country, the exile is “to protect the peace, national security, public order, health, public morality, the rights and freedoms of third parties…”, although it is their rulers who The Nicaraguan population must take care of itself. Ortega, as if he owned it, decides who can and who cannot live in Nicaragua. His tolerance for criticism is zero, a tendency that is not limited to him, since, with other formulas, his illegitimacy transcends borders and infects other democracies, which attack the media and citizens. Without going any further, a former Panamanian president uses the local judicial system with the intention of silencing and intimidating, something that has begun to be noticed. Yesterday, for example, after learning of the kidnapping processes promoted by this former president against the assets of communicators, the United States embassy in Panama expressed that it views these attacks “with concern,” which have become an “alarming trend” that seeks the use of the law to “intimidate”. It cannot be expressed better. – LA PRENSA, Feb. 10.