Contra Leaders Attempt Trip to Managua: Summary of Events & Statements Deborah Tyroler
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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository NotiCen Latin America Digital Beat (LADB) 11-25-1987 Contra Leaders Attempt Trip To Managua: Summary Of Events & Statements Deborah Tyroler Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/noticen Recommended Citation Tyroler, Deborah. "Contra Leaders Attempt Trip To Managua: Summary Of Events & Statements." (1987). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/noticen/1118 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Latin America Digital Beat (LADB) at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in NotiCen by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. LADB Article Id: 075727 ISSN: 1089-1560 Contra Leaders Attempt Trip To Managua: Summary Of Events & Statements by Deborah Tyroler Category/Department: General Published: Wednesday, November 25, 1987 On Nov. 23, the Miami office of the contra umbrella organization, the Nicaraguan Resistance, announced that two members of its directorate Alfonso Robelo and Maria Azucena Ferrey were planning to travel to Managua on the following day to deliver their first official reply to a cease-fire plan proposed by President Daniel Ortega. Contra spokespersons said Robelo and Ferrey would present a "document" to Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo in Managua at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. At a news conference in Managua on Monday, President Ortega reiterated his government's policy on contra leaders who wish to enter Nicaragua. He said Robelo and Ferrey, and any other contra leaders, would have to first accept the government's amnesty decree before they would be permitted to visit Managua. Interior Minister Tomas Borge said they would be arrested upon attempting to enter the country. The two contra leaders had reportedly planned to board a plane in San Jose, Costa Rica. [In an interview with the New York Times last week, contra leader Adolfo Calero said he and his contemporaries planned to send a message to the Cardinal on their general views regarding the mediation process via commercial courier. In that interview, Calero said that unlike the guerrillas in El Salvador, the contras were not insisting on sharing power. In general terms, he described the contra's goal as "competition for power through a free vote."] When the Times asked Lenore Huper, Nicaragua's Consul General in Washington, about the contras' plans for a trip to Managua, she said "known counter-revolutionaries" have to sign a document requesting amnesty in the consulate before entering Nicaragua. The first such leader to sign such a document in Washington was Edgar Chamorro, who broke with the contra leadership several years ago. Sarali Porta, a spokesperson for the Nicaraguan Embassy in Washington, was cited by the Times as saying that the Nicaraguan government regarded the publicized contra plan to visit Managua as a "contra provocation," i.e., a propaganda maneuver. "Robelo and Ferrey should ask for amnesty before entering the country," she said. "If they don't, they will be basically acting illegally and will have to suffer the consequences of their actions." According to contra spokespersons in Costa Rica, airlines in Costa Rica were warned by the Nicaraguan government not to permit Robelo and Ferrey to board aircraft landing in Nicaragua. On Nov. 24, the contras reportedly requested the papal nuncio in San Jose, Costa Rica to personally relay their proposal to Cardinal Obando. However, the nuncio refused to receive the contra "delegation." After the nuncio had rejected the request, a contra spokesperson in San Jose told UPI that the contra leadership was seeking "an institution or personality" to deliver the document to the Cardinal in Managua. Enrique Arguello, spokesperson for the FDN in Costa Rica, informed UPI that the document "requests democratization in Nicaragua, generalized amnesty, and an end to the state of siege." At a press briefing on Tuesday, State Department spokesperson Phyllis Oakley said Nicaragua's refusal to allow Robelo and Ferrey to visit Managua calls into question the Sandinista government's willingness to negotiate national reconciliation. "The Sandinista refusal to permit the temporary return of two resistance leaders calls in question the sincerity of their protestations that they are willing to negotiate national reconciliation with the opposition," she declared. "In contrast, we note that in El Salvador, the political leaders of the rebel ©2011 The University of New Mexico, Latin American & Iberian Institute. All rights reserved. Page 1 of 2 LADB Article Id: 075727 ISSN: 1089-1560 movement have been permitted to return to take part in El Salvador's political life." (Basic data from UPI, 11/24/87; AFP, 11/23/87; New York Times, 11/24/87) -- End -- ©2011 The University of New Mexico, Latin American & Iberian Institute. All rights reserved. Page 2 of 2.