In response to ongoing protests in Nicaragua and the senseless killing of a Jesuit high school student there, the Jesuits of Central America, the Conference of Provincials of Latin America and the Jesuits of Canada and the United States have issued statements calling for an end to violence in the country after several days of protests to proposed social security legislation. [Update: On June 7, the Jesuits of Central America issued another statement (Spanish).]
Citizens began protesting on April 18 after the government announced changes to the nation’s social security system. The proposed overhaul, which would have increased pension contributions while reducing benefits by 5 percent, was cancelled by Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega on April 22 in response to the protests.
The protests led to the deaths of more than two dozen people. Álvaro Manuel Conrado Davila, a 15-year-old student at Instituto Loyola, the Jesuit High School in Managua, Nicaragua, was among the victims killed while peacefully protesting on April 20.
According to reports, Conrado was shot by police with a rubber bullet that struck him at close range in the throat, and he died later while undergoing surgery at a local hospital. The Instituto Loyola community gathered for Conrado’s funeral on April 21, which was attended by an approximately 400 people.
The Conference of Provincials of Latin America said in its statement, “We profoundly lament the acts of violence against the people who gathered in a peaceful manner to oppose the social security reform. We condemn as anti-democratic all the violent repression on the part of state agencies and individuals and groups organised by the government”.
The Jesuits of Central America called for a national dialogue that will “peacefully lead in a direction of integral development and social and environmental justice”.
The Jesuit Conference of Canada and the US said that they “stand in solidarity with our brother Jesuits, their lay collaborators and all the people they serve in Nicaragua.
“We pray for peace in the country and hope that all sides will engage in truthful dialogue. We pray for calm between all of the parties and we remind government leaders of their responsibility to protect those who have lawfully gathered to seek redress from their government.”
The Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities (AJCU) also issued a statement, which expressed solidarity with “our Jesuit sister institution, the University of Central America (UCA) of Nicaragua, which calls its students to peaceful advocacy for social justice, even as government violence at the University’s gates suppresses dissent.
“The UCA of Nicaragua, like all Jesuit institutions, has the mission to both provide students with professional formation and to encourage their commitment to a just, humane and environmentally sustainable world.” AJCU urged the government to respect the constitutional rights of its citizens, including freedom of expression and peaceful protest.
Pope Francis has also called for an end to the violence in the country. “I express my closeness in prayer to that country and I am united with the bishops in asking that every form of violence end, that a pointless shedding of blood be avoided and that open issues be resolved peacefully and with a sense of responsibility,” he said on April 22. [jesuits.org]
Read the statements by the Conference of Provincials of Latin America and the Jesuits of Canada and the US and the statements issued by the Jesuits of Central America on April 21 and on June 7.
Images by Ingrid Orozco via jesuits.org