16 December 2022, The Tablet

Detained Nicaraguan bishop appears in court

by CNS

Bishop Rolando Álvarez Lagos of Matagalpa was accused of conspiracy to undermine the country and propagate false news.


Detained Nicaraguan bishop appears in court

Bishop Rolando Álvarez Lagos of Matagalpa, pictured in May this year, has been held by the Nicaraguan authorities since 19 August.
CNS/Maynor Valenzuela, Reuters

A Nicaraguan bishop held for nearly four months was formally charged during an unannounced court hearing on 13 December, marking his first appearance since being detained.

Bishop Rolando Álvarez Lagos of Matagalpa was accused of conspiracy to undermine the country and propagate false news, according to a statement from the courts in the national capital, Managua.

Bishop Álvarez was assigned a public defender and told his trial would start on 10 January, according to the statement, which included photos of the prelate, appearing gaunt and wearing a blue shirt while sitting in court.

More than 40 political prisoners have been convicted on the same charges, according to the newspaper Confidencial.

The court statement also said it had requested that Interpol issue an alert for the arrest of another priest, Father Uriel Antonio Vallejos, who is accused of similar offenses.

Bishop Álvarez’s court appearance came after months of being incommunicado with no information on his condition being disclosed.

The Nicaraguan bishops’ conference also refrained from speaking out on Bishop Álvarez’s condition as the regime of President Daniel Ortega and his wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, continued persecuting the Church and other critical voices in the country.

The persecution has been so severe and so capricious that more than a dozen priests have been arrested or forced to flee the country.

Other prelates and Catholic groups have been expelled, including the apostolic nuncio, the Missionaries of Charity and Trócaire, the charitable arm of the Irish Catholic Church.

Repression against church workers and Catholics has continued in December.

Manuel Antonio Obando Cortedano, communications director in the Diocese of Matagalpa, was abducted by police as he left his home on 11 Decemvber, according to the news website Mosaico CSI. Wilberto Artola, a journalist with a Catholic media outlet TV Merced, was also abducted that night.

Bishop Álvarez was arrested on 19 August, during a predawn raid on the diocesan curia, where he was ensconced with 11 other priests and colleagues.

The others arrested with him remain held in El Chipote, a prison notorious for inhumane conditions.

The bishop had been protesting the closure of Catholic media outlets in the Diocese of Matagalpa. Father Vallejos, meanwhile, resisted an attempt at seizing radio equipment from his parish.

Murillo, who is also the government spokeswoman, did not respond to a request for comment.


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