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Nicaragua shut church-linked universities
By J.Lo
AT least two Nicaragua universities shuttered with ties to Roman Catholic Church just day after stripping 18 employer unions of their legal status in an ongoing clampdown on dissent.
Since antigovernment protests were violently put down in 2018, leaving more than 350 dead, hundreds imprisoned and more than 100,000 in exile, rights groups, United Nations and Western governments accused President Daniel Ortega's government of illegally attempting to crush any and all opposition.
Steps against universities, which have campuses in several cities, were published in official La Gaceta gazette.
Just like unions, they had their legal status canceled for alleged contraventions of law, according to government.
Institutions were ordered to hand over all information on students, professors, study plans and other details to Central American country's National Council of Universities, or CNU, according to publication.
Universities' thousands of students will be integrated into other CNU-approved institutions and all university property will be transferred to the state.
The decree also scrapped legal status of Mariana Foundation for cancer awareness, which is also linked to Church, for alleged financial infractions.
Ortega's government, under UN sanctions for raft of authoritarian actions, has recently clashed with leaders of Church who have criticized alleged rights violations.
These include detention of hundreds of critics, among them several would-be challengers to Ortega who were jailed ahead of presidential elections in 2021.
They were among 222 jailed government opponents suddenly expelled to United States last month and stripped of their citizenship, along with dozens of others.
Earlier government deprived almost all country's employer associations of their legal status for alleged violations of registration process and "inconsistencies" in their financial statements.
Last month, authorities declared association of private banks and another 12 associations illegal.
More than 2,000 associations, nongovernmental associations and employer unions have been barred from operating since 2020.
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