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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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09069918.000
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1994-03-25
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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>