MANAGUA, (Reuters) – A Nicaraguan court sentenced Catholic Bishop Rolando Alvarez to a more than 26-year prison term yesterday, a day after the cleric and critic of President Daniel Ortega declined to be expelled to the United States as part of a prisoner release.
Alvarez was convicted on charges of undermining national integrity and spreading false news, and during yesterday’s court hearing it was also announced that he would be fined and stripped of his Nicaraguan citizenship.
Last August, police arrested Alvarez, bishop of the Matagalpa diocese, after dislodging him after he had barricaded himself in church property for several weeks along with other priests.
Alvarez was included in the surprise political prisoner release covering a total of 222 individuals and announced by Ortega’s government on Thursday, but Alvarez refused to board the plane destined for Dulles International Airport near Washington.
In televised remarks later on Thursday, the increasingly authoritarian Ortega derided the released prisoners as criminal agents of foreign powers who sought to undermine national sovereignty, and said Alvarez had been returned to jail.