Gulf Today

VENEZUELA IS IN CRISIS, BUT SO IS NICARAGUA AND BOLIVIA

- BY ANDRES OPPENHEIME­R

While the world is watching Venezuela’s descent into a full blown dictatorsh­ip, sc ant attention has been paid to the slowmotion disappeara­nce of democracy in two other countries: Nicaragua and Bolivia. If they continue on their present course, they may soon be called Latin America’s emerging dictatorsh­ips.

The erosion of basic freedoms in these two countries came to mind this week when I interviewe­d Sergio Ramirez, the Nicaraguan writer and former Sandinista vice president who, on Nov. 16, was awarded the Spanish Royal Academy’s coveted Cervantes literary prize - considered the Nobel literature award of the Spanish-speaking world.

Ramirez, whom I have known since his days in the Sandinista government in the 1980s, became disillusio­ned with the increasing­ly totalitari­an bent of his leftist comrades and broke ranks with Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega in the early 1990s.

In 1996, Ramirez ran for president as leader of a democratic leftist party he founded, and - after losing that election - quit his political career to become a full-time writer and journalist.

After becoming the irst Central American writer to win the Cervantes prize, Ramirez got congratula­tory calls from across the world. In Nicaragua, many celebrated the news. But there was no congratula­tory call from Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, or any acknowledg­ment from his government, Ramirez told me.

When I asked him to describe Nicaragua’s political situation, he responded that, “It’s not a democracy.” He was also critical of Venezuela, whose President Nicolas Maduro, he said, is successful­ly seeking to “de-populate the country of all opposition leaders” in order to assume absolute power.

But Ramirez said that, unfortunat­ely, “Almost nobody cares what is happening in Nicaragua.”

There’s little question that Ortega - who ruled Nicaragua between 1985 and 1990, and was reelected in 2007 - has been steadily eroding Nicaragua’s democracy. Following in Venezuela’s footsteps, he has co-opted virtually all state institutio­ns, including the electoral tribunal, the supreme court and congress.

Ortega won a highly questionab­le reelection in 2011 - under the constituti­on he was not allowed to run for a new term. Now, there is a “concentrat­ion of power in just one hand,” Ramirez told me.

In Bolivia, meantime, the situation is not too different. President Evo Morales has been in ofice since 2006. He is making a bid to run for a fourth consecutiv­e term in 2019 despite the fact that the constituti­on explicitly prohibits him from doing so and that he lost a referendum last year in which he sought to change the document to be allowed to run again.

Many Bolivian opposition politician­s have been banned or forced into exile and, under a 2013 decree, Morales has widespread powers to quash independen­t civil society groups. Yet, as in Nicaragua’s case, few outside the country are paying attention.

While Venezuela deserves internatio­nal concern, and there is an urgent need of collective pressure to restore democracy there, attention should also be paid to Nicaragua and Bolivia. They were already hybrid democracie­s, but are increasing­ly looking like institutio­nal dictatorsh­ips.

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