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- <text id=93TT2182>
- <title>
- Sep. 06, 1993: A Country Held Hostage
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NICARAGUA, Page 42
- A Country Held Hostage
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Former contras and ex-Sandinistas are both at war with the Chamorro
- government
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--With reporting by Maria Cristina Caballero/Washington and Laura
- Lopez/Managua
- </p>
- <p> The Jackal flashed a wicked smile as he ushered 38 invited
- guests into the red brick schoolhouse. Before the Nicaraguan
- government delegates could take in their surroundings in the
- muddy mountain town of El Zungano, the Jackal's band of former
- contra guerrillas closed around them in a tight cordon. Training
- automatic weapons on the hostages, the rightist rebels announced
- the price for freedom: dismissal of Sandinista army chief Humberto
- Ortega and top presidential aide Antonio Lacayo, viewed as too
- easy on the country's ousted Marxist rulers.
- </p>
- <p> Within 24 hours, Comandante 31 and his band of ex-Sandinista
- officials responded by storming the Managua headquarters of
- the conservative National Opposition Union (U.N.O.). Seizing
- 34 people including Vice President Virgilio Godoy Reyes, they
- demanded the release of the El Zungano hostages and U.S. war
- reparations of $17 billion. For six days, Nicaraguans feared
- the worst as mediators sought a compromise between the outlaw
- bands. Finally, both sides agreed to free all hostages, and
- the government and former contras signed an eight-point plan
- aimed at alleviating tensions.
- </p>
- <p> While relief was evident when the standoff ended without spilled
- blood, most Nicaraguans saw little cause to celebrate. The conditions
- that provoked the confrontation--governmental disarray, unpopular
- political appointments, unsettled land grievances and shattered
- economic hopes--remain unaffected. Though few citizens are
- girding for a resumption of the civil war that despoiled Nicaragua
- throughout the 1980s, there is a palpable fear that if the two
- sides do not continue a dialogue, the country will sink from
- political polarization into chaos. "Our tradition has been to
- divide in times of crisis," says Jose Pallais, the Deputy Foreign
- Minister. "The solution has always been for one group to get
- on top and squash the other."
- </p>
- <p> The spectacle was hardly edifying to Washington. For most of
- a decade, the U.S. made Nicaragua a prime ideological battleground,
- spending hundreds of millions of dollars, enduring bitter domestic
- debate and engaging in illegal-arms deals to face down Managua's
- Soviet-backed rulers. Only the end of the cold war prompted
- the two superpowers to bow out. Americans thought Nicaragua's
- problems were solved when Violeta Barrios de Chamorro was elected
- President in early 1990.
- </p>
- <p> But she has done little to pull the country out of its mire.
- When the government faltered on its promise to deliver land
- and reparations, former contras and ex-Sandinista troops took
- up guns again to grab territory and settle scores. In Managua
- the leader who pledged national reconciliation could not even
- reconcile the players within her own government. Last January
- the 12-party U.N.O. broke with her, along with Vice President
- Godoy. That has left Chamorro politically dependent on the Sandinistas,
- who were allowed to retain de facto control of the army and
- police forces. Now they too are pulling away as the economy
- worsens. The legislature is in virtual paralysis, with nearly
- half the Deputies refusing to attend sessions.
- </p>
- <p> Although the elegant Chamorro still commands considerable respect
- among the Nicaraguan people and abroad, her detached management
- style has increasingly isolated her. Through the first 24 hours
- of the hostage drama, she did not act at all, waiting for her
- son-in-law and chief of staff, the controversial Lacayo, to
- return from a trip to El Salvador. Even then she remained out
- of sight, while other politicians and civic leaders visited
- or sent representatives to the hostage sites. Before the last
- prisoners were freed on Wednesday, she left for Mexico, offering
- no explanation. In the end, the government indicated only half-hearted
- interest in bringing charges and made it clear that the abductors
- would be granted amnesty. "The hostage incident was a product
- of the incompetence and negligence of the government," says
- economist Francisco Mayorga, chief of the negotiating team.
- "The President and the people in power are aloof and detached
- from reality."
- </p>
- <p> Even if Chamorro were more engaged, she would be in a difficult
- spot. She must navigate between the Sandinistas, who balk at
- most attempts to decontrol the economy, and the U.N.O. coalition,
- which denounces every concession given to the former ruling
- party. Although the President has reduced the public sector,
- advanced privatization and deregulated commerce, U.N.O. members
- continue to rail at her for maintaining prominent Sandinistas
- in top positions. "In the end, Chamorro didn't keep anybody
- happy," says Rene Nunez, a Sandinista leader.
- </p>
- <p> Nicaraguans fear they have made little progress since voters
- signaled their hunger for reconciliation and democratic reform
- three years ago. The hostage standoff seemed like a new production
- of an old script with a familiar cast of characters. Cardinal
- Miguel Obando y Bravo headed the government negotiations with
- the contras, now called the recontras. Former President Daniel
- Ortega mediated with the ex-Sandinistas, rechristened the recompas,
- for rearmed soldiers or companeros. Even the costumes and props
- rethe same. The recompas sported the Sandinistas' trademark
- black-and-red kerchiefs. The recontras, outfitted in fatigues,
- hoisted rifles purchased with funds thought to have come from
- Miami-based backers.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect for more disturbances runs high. Last March recontras
- stormed the Nicaraguan embassy in Costa Rica and took 25 people
- hostage. Two months later, the monotonous routine of strikes,
- denunciations and demonstrations was broken by a blast in Managua
- that uncovered a well-stocked safe house reportedly maintained
- by Salvadoran and Basque guerrillas, rekindling fears that the
- Sandinistas were engaged in international subversion. July brought
- the worst incident to date: 45 people were killed when recompas
- clashed with mostly government troops in the northern town of
- Esteli. The recontras claim that since 1990 about 400 of their
- men have been killed by recompas. The military counters that
- it has little control over the renegade recompas forces.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the political upheaval scares off foreign investors.
- The government's failure to return all the properties unjustly
- confiscated by the Sandinistas and to diminish Sandinista influence
- on policy has also put off some aid donors, most notably the
- U.S. During the first two years of Chamorro's term, Washington
- gave nearly $1 billion in grants, loans and forgiven debt. But
- in July the Senate voted to cut off $94 million in aid, pending
- the outcome of an ongoing investigation of Nicaraguan army and
- intelligence ties to international terrorists. The House will
- soon decide whether to follow suit.
- </p>
- <p> Chamorro can ill afford to let aid funds dry up. Gross domestic
- product is growing at an annual rate of less than 1%. Six of
- every 10 people are unemployed or so underemployed they have
- trouble buying basic necessities, and 70% of the population
- lives in poverty. Progress is stymied by battles over farmland,
- and small landowners, even recompas, complain that they cannot
- gain access to credit because the Sandinistas control bank disbursements.
- </p>
- <p> Analysts connect the snarl of problems to a single thread: the
- lack of any patriotic spirit. Says Angel Saldomando of cries,
- a private think tank in Managua: "There is no political class
- with a national consciousness, no social base from which to
- resolve the problems." That leaves Chamorro, out of touch and
- over her head, fumbling to start a national dialogue. Late last
- week she seemed to be signaling new resolve as reports circulated
- that the ex-Sandinista army intelligence chief, now director
- of army information, was about to be dismissed.
- </p>
- <p> Although the popular sentiment is to see Chamorro finish her
- six-year term, U.N.O. leaders may conspire to cut short her
- tenure. If her former allies mount a legislative challenge,
- Chamorro has little strength to fight back: she now commands
- the loyalty of only her Cabinet ministers. Yet neither Sandinista
- nor U.N.O. leaders are clamoring for the job. The truth is that
- no one wants, or knows how, to govern Nicaragua today.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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