The New York Times 2024-08-20 12:10:20


Middle East Crisis: Netanyahu Agrees to Mediators’ Cease-Fire Proposal, Blinken Says

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Blinken says Netanyahu has agreed to a proposal to bridge gaps in cease-fire talks.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said on Monday the Israeli prime minister had accepted a Biden administration proposal to close some of the remaining gaps on a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, and he urged Hamas “to do the same.”

A spokesman for Mr. Netanyahu, Omer Dostri, confirmed the prime minister had told Mr. Blinken that Israel had accepted the proposal, which American officials presented last week with the support of Egypt and Qatar in an attempt to stop the fighting in Gaza and avert a wider regional war.

The proposal seeks to forge a compromise on at least some of the disputes between Israel and Hamas on the details of a truce after months of on-and-off negotiations.

But officials in both Israel and Hamas have said the plan, known as a “bridging proposal,” left major disagreements unresolved, and they voiced intense skepticism over the likelihood of an imminent deal. Some Israeli officials privately expressed skepticism that the American proposal would result in a breakthrough with Hamas.

Osama Hamdan, a Hamas official, said in a televised interview that Hamas had broadly accepted the framework for a cease-fire pushed by President Biden in late May. But he accused Mr. Netanyahu of introducing new conditions to that proposal and said Israeli officials had conceded nothing on key issues during the recent round of talks in Doha.

“We believe that the Americans are solely trying to buy time to allow the genocide to continue,” Mr. Hamdan said on Al-Jazeera, the pan-Arab network. “If the U.S. administration was serious, we wouldn’t need more negotiations — only to implement Biden’s proposal.”

Mr. Blinken’s comments came after he met for nearly three hours with Mr. Netanyahu in Jerusalem, and afterward he sought to put pressure on both sides to come to an agreement.

“In a very constructive meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu today he confirmed to me that Israel accepts the bridging proposal — that he supports it,” Mr. Blinken said at an evening news conference. “It’s now incumbent on Hamas to do the same.”

Mr. Netanyahu’s office said in a statement that the meeting with Mr. Blinken had been “positive” and that the prime minister had “reiterated Israel’s commitment to the current American proposal on the release of our hostages, which takes into account Israel’s security needs.”

But Mr. Netanyahu, in his own videotaped remarks released later, focused mostly on Iran and its allied militias. He did not mention the U.S. peace plan.

“I greatly appreciate the efforts that the U.S. is making in regional defense against the Iranian axis,” he said. “This is important, of course, for the State of Israel.” He added, “I also greatly appreciate the understanding that the U.S. has shown for our vital security interests as part of our joint efforts to bring about the release of our hostages.”

Talks ended in Qatar on Friday and were expected to resume this week in Egypt. Before meeting Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Blinken said the Cairo talks represent “probably the best, maybe the last, opportunity to get the hostages home, to get a cease-fire, and to put everyone on a better path to enduring peace and security.”

Mr. Blinken was expected to travel to Egypt and Qatar on Tuesday for more meetings aimed at getting the proposed deal over the finish line. It is his ninth visit to the Middle East since the war in Gaza began last October.

The cease-fire talks have taken on added importance, given regional tensions between Israel, Iran and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group. Both Iran and Hezbollah have threatened to attack Israel over the assassinations of leaders of Hezbollah and Hamas, raising the prospect of a much broader conflict.

Diplomats hope that if the fighting is brought to a halt in Gaza, it might limit or even prevent an Iranian-led revenge attack. Senior negotiators were hoping to resume the cease-fire talks in Egypt by the end of the week.

Mr. Blinken acknowledged in his remarks to reporters that “this is a fraught moment, in Israel, with deep concern about the possibility of attacks coming from Iran, coming from Hezbollah.” He noted the United States had deployed forces to deter attacks and help with Israel’s defense.

“We’re working to make sure that there is no escalation, that there are no provocations, that there are no actions that in any way could move us away from getting this deal over the line,” Mr. Blinken told reporters. “Or for that matter, escalating the conflict to other places and to greater intensity.”

Isabel Kershner and Michael Levenson contributed reporting.

Key Developments

Israeli operations continue in central and southern Gaza, and other news.

  • Israeli military operations in central and southern Gaza have killed at least 25 people since Sunday, according to the Palestinian Civil Defense. The Israeli military said on Monday that it had killed dozens of “terrorists” in those areas, struck Hamas facilities in central Gaza and dismantled militants’ infrastructure above and below ground in the southern part of the territory. The military also said that it had struck and killed a Hamas fighter who launched projectiles from southern Gaza toward Israel. The Israeli forces’ accounts could not be independently verified.

  • The Israeli military said on Monday it had targeted a number of Hezbollah’s weapons storage facilities in the eastern Bekaa Valley in Lebanon, close to the Syrian border. Lebanon’s Health Ministry said at least nine people had been injured in the strikes, including two children. Footage broadcast on local news networks showed large secondary explosions at one of the targeted sites, which was among at least three locations hit by airstrikes, according to Lebanon’s state-run news agency.

  • Israeli forces on Sunday killed another Palestinian journalist, Ibrahim Muhareb, according to the International Federation of Journalists, bringing the total number of Palestinian journalists and news media workers killed since Oct. 7 to at least 123, the federation said. The Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate said that Mr. Muhareb, a freelancer, was killed and another journalist was hit with shrapnel and hospitalized after Israeli tank fire targeted Mr. Muhareb and a group of his colleagues while they were wearing gear identifying them as press near the city of Khan Younis, in southern Gaza. The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the attack.

    More than half of all aid workers killed around the world in 2023 were slain during the first three months of the war in Gaza, the United Nations’ humanitarian office said on Monday. Those killings, largely from airstrikes, turned 2023 into the deadliest year on record for aid workers, the office said in a statement commemorating World Humanitarian Day. UNRWA, the U.N. agency that is the largest aid group on the ground in Gaza, said that 207 of its workers had been killed since the war began.

Hamas and Islamic Jihad claim responsibility for a bombing in Tel Aviv that injured one.

Hamas’s military wing and Islamic Jihad took responsibility on Monday for what they said was a suicide bombing in Tel Aviv late Sunday, and threatened further attacks because of the “continued civilian displacement and killings” of Palestinians.

The Israeli police and the Shin Bet security agency said in a statement that a “powerful explosive” had been detonated on Lechi Road in southern Tel Aviv, but made no mention of a suicide attack.

One passerby was moderately injured, the statement said, which described the bombing as a terrorist attack and said that the authorities were investigating. The statement did not say that the assailant had died.

If confirmed, it would be the first suicide bombing in Israel since around 2016.

The Israeli news media broadcast security camera footage of a man with a backpack in the area shortly before the blast. The man was killed in the explosion, news outlets said.

Peretz Amar, the police chief of the Tel Aviv District, said at a news conference that the attacker, who had no criminal record and had not been on the radar of the Israeli security authorities, entered Israel from the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Mr. Amar did not name the attacker but said the explosives had most likely been manufactured in the West Bank and were of low quality.

The attacker had most likely seen dozens of people gathered at a synagogue and stopped to prime the explosives, but had inadvertently detonated them, he said, adding that it could have been a large-scale attack had events turned out differently.

Hundreds of people were killed in suicide bombings in Israel in the late 1990s and early 2000s, as part of the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising. The attacks shook Israeli society and hardened attitudes against Palestinians as potential partners in a peace deal involving two states. The attacks were partly responsible for a decision by Ariel Sharon, then prime minister, to build a separation barrier along and inside the West Bank.

Many Israelis have been on alert for possible attacks since Oct. 7, when Hamas led a deadly incursion into the country that killed around 1,200 people, sparking the war in Gaza. Since then, Hezbollah, a militant group supported by Iran and based in Lebanon, has fired thousands of missiles and drones at northern Israel, while a drone fired last month by the Houthi militia in Yemen hit an apartment building in Tel Aviv, killing one person. In retaliation, Israeli fighter jets bombed a port in Yemen controlled by the Houthis, a group also backed by Iran.

The reference to the “continued civilian displacement and killings” of Palestinians in the statement on Monday by the Qassam Brigades — Hamas’s military wing — and Islamic Jihad most likely refers to events in Gaza, where around 40,000 people have been killed since Oct. 7, according to the Palestinian health authorities, and most of the 2.2 million Palestinians sealed into the territory have been displaced, many of them repeatedly.

But the reference may have also been meant to include events in the West Bank, where Israeli security forces and settlers have killed more than 600 Palestinians since Oct. 7, according to the United Nations, and where the pace of settlements has increased. In the same period, 24 Israelis, including eight members of the security forces, have died in clashes or attacks by Palestinians in the territory.

The settlements are considered illegal under international law, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has said that the Jewish people are not settlers on their own land.

A woman and her six children are killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza, her family says.

Hala Khattab’s home in the city of Deir al-Balah in Gaza had been full of children — six of them. There was her oldest son, Hussein, 15; her 9-year-old quadruplets, Kinan, Hamman, Lujain and Sibal; and her baby girl, Wakeen.

Early on Sunday, an Israeli airstrike demolished the family’s second-floor apartment, killing Ms. Khattab, a 36-year-old teacher, and all her children, her family said. Their father, Ashraf Attar, narrowly escaped with his life.

“We collected the scattered body parts of the children,” said Ms. Khattab’s brother, Ahmad Khattab, a nurse who lives nearby and helped search the rubble. Mr. Khattab added, “There is absolutely no explanation” for the strike on the family.

The Israeli military confirmed an attack in Deir al-Balah on Sunday morning, saying that its air force had carried out a precision strike on “a significant Islamic Jihad terrorist” who had “directed attacks” on its troops throughout the war. The military said it had launched the strike after warning civilians on Friday to temporarily evacuate the area.

The military did not name the target of the strike, and it remained unclear if Israeli commanders believed he had lived in the Khattab family’s apartment or in another location.

The children’s father is also a nurse, not a militant, said Mr. Khattab 35. The strike demolished all the exterior walls of the family’s apartment in a three-story building, he said. The blast threw Mr. Attar from the apartment, leaving him with a broken arm and burned legs, the brother said.

The building is in an area that has never been ordered to evacuate during 10 months of war, and the family felt safe there, he said. The family did not receive an evacuation order or a warning call from the Israeli military just before the strike, either, Mr. Khattab said.

The strike came a day before Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel at what Mr. Blinken called “a decisive moment” for diplomatic negotiations aimed at reaching a cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas. The meeting came more than 10 months into a war that began when Hamas led an attack into southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people and led to the abduction of about 250 others into Gaza, Israeli officials said.

More than 40,000 Palestinians have also been killed in the war, according to Gazan health authorities, and it has taken an exceptional toll on children, who have been caught in the middle.

Dr. Khalil al-Dagran, the director of Al-Aqsa Hospital, said that his hospital received the bodies of Ms. Khattab and her six children on Sunday morning.

“What did these children do?” Mohammed Khattab, the children’s grandfather, said in a video interview with the Reuters news agency.

Ahmad Khattab said the family had buried the six children in one grave.

Ukraine Strikes Bridges in Russia, Aiming to Entrap Troops

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At Least 1 Dead and 6 Missing After Yacht Sinks Off Sicily

At least one person was killed and six others, including a British software mogul, were missing on Monday after a sailing yacht carrying 22 people sank during a violent storm off the coast of Sicily, Italian officials said.

The yacht sank after a storm “with strong winds” struck around 5 a.m., according to Luciano Pischedda, the Italian Coast Guard official overseeing the rescue operations. The vessel had been anchored about a half-mile off Porticello, about 12 miles east of the Sicilian capital, Palermo.

Camper & Nicholsons, managers of the sailing yacht, said in an emailed statement that there were 12 guests and 10 crew onboard.

The authorities have yet to determine what caused the yacht to sink. “This will be ascertained later,” Mr. Pischedda said, adding that several crew members were in the hospital and had not spoken to investigators.

Among the dead and missing, four were British, two were American, and one was a man with dual citizenship from Canada and Antigua, he said.

One of those unaccounted for is Mike Lynch, a British software mogul who was acquitted in the United States in June of fraud, according to a person with knowledge of the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about it.

His wife, Angela Bacares, was rescued. Mr. Lynch, who once was described as Britain’s Bill Gates, had fought for more than a decade against accusations that he had defrauded Hewlett-Packard when he sold it his company, Autonomy, for $11 billion. The legal battle represented one of the biggest fraud cases in Silicon Valley history.

Salvatore Cocina, a top official with Sicily’s civil protection agency, said that Mr. Lynch’s daughter, Hannah Lynch, was also among the six people missing. All were passengers on the yacht, the Coast Guard said.

Mr. Cocina said the body that had been recovered was that of the yacht’s cook.

A passenger ship sailing under the flag of the Netherlands, the Sir Robert Baden Powell, anchored nearby, provided immediate assistance to the 15 surviving passengers, Mr. Pischedda said.

Karsten Börner, the captain of the Sir Robert, said in a telephone interview said he had to steady his ship to “keep it in position” during what he described as very strong winds. During the storm, the yacht seemed to disappear, he said. “At a certain moment she was gone behind us,” he said.

After the wind dropped down, “we couldn’t see the yacht any more, and then we saw a red flare,” he added. When he and a colleague went to check out the flare’s position, they spotted a “life raft adrift with 15 people on board, one of them a baby and four people injured,” he said. They were taken aboard the Sir Robert and Captain Börner contacted the Coast Guard, which brought the survivors to shore.

Captain Börner said he didn’t know when the ship went down because the storm made it difficult to see clearly. The wind was “really violent,” he said.

For the most part, the survivors didn’t speak much he said. “They were all under shock,” he said. “It was a bad, bad situation.”

Monday’s storm surprised experts with its intensity.

Col. Attilio Di Diodato, director of the Italian Air Force’s Center for Aerospace Meteorology and Climatology, said the agency had registered intense lighting activity and strong gusts of wind in the area at the time of the accident.

“It was very intense and brief in duration,” he said of the storm. He could not rule out that it had been a waterspout, or small tornado, but nevertheless called it “an important event.”

Italy’s firefighter corps said that its divers had started carrying out a search and rescue mission at dawn.

On Monday afternoon, expert divers with the firefighter corps arrived in Porticello to search the sunken vessel, which was under about 165 feet of water.

Operations at that depth, were “complicated,” and required specialized divers, said Luca Cari, a spokesman for the firefighters.

Fabio Cefalù, a fisherman in Porticello, told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica that he saw a waterspout — a sort of mini-tornado — that lasted “about 12 minutes” off the shore of Porticello shortly before 4 a.m.

Around 4:10, he said he saw a red flare go off “about 500 meters from the shore.” He said he waited for the weather to calm down, and went out about 20 minutes later to the site where the flare had gone off.

“We found only the cushions, and a few planks” floating in the water, he told the newspaper. There was no sign of the ship, and he immediately called the coast guard.

The boat, identified by Italian officials as the Bayesian, is an Italian-made 56-meter-long sailing yacht first launched in 2008, according to the website marinetraffic.com, which tracks ships. It sails under the flag of Britain, and was built by Perini Navi, an Italian luxury yacht maker.

Eight of the 15 passengers who were rescued were taken to hospitals in Palermo, the coast guard said. Camper & Nicholsons, the managers of the yacht, said its priority was to “provide all necessary support to the rescued passengers and crew.”

Giuseppe D’Agostino, the mayor of Santa Flavia, which includes Porticello, said the survivors would be cared for at a local hotel. The city had also brought them immediate necessities, like toiletries and clothes.

He said in a telephone interview that he had not spoken to the survivors since “they’re in shock.”

The youngest passenger onboard, a 1-year-old girl named Sophie, was taken to the Di Cristina hospital in Palermo with her mother, Charlotte, who had some scrapes and cuts, said Domenico Cipolla, director of the pediatric emergency room at the hospital.

Sophie’s father was in the hospital’s adult emergency room and had been in contact with his wife and daughter by phone, Dr. Cipolla said. He was not permitted to release the family’s surname. Both mother and child were in good condition apart from “great emotional stress” he added in a telephone interview.

“We’re comforting them more than curing them,” he said.

Michael J. de la Merced contributed reporting.

Survivors of Doomsday Starvation Cult Testify Against Pastor and 93 Associates

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When her parents denied her food and water for eight days, the girl said that she knew she was going to die, just like her two younger siblings. For days, her parents had beaten her when they caught her sipping water or looking for food. Famished and frail, she said they dressed her in special attire worn for death.

“The children were not supposed to eat, so they could die,” the child, a 9-year-old identified only as EG and hidden inside a witness protection booth, told a packed courtroom on Thursday in the coastal Kenyan city of Mombasa.

She was among the first witnesses to testify last week in the manslaughter trial of Paul Nthenge Mackenzie, an evangelical pastor accused of commanding members of his church to starve their children and themselves to death in order to meet Jesus in the end times.

The pastor and 93 other defendants, including his top associates and some of his followers, denied the manslaughter allegations and pleaded not guilty at the start of the trial.

In three other courts, Mr. Mackenzie and several of the other suspects are facing separate charges of murder, terrorism and child torture and abuse. Earlier this year, the Kenyan government declared Mr. Mackenzie’s church, Good News International Ministries, “an organized criminal group.”

Since April last year, 429 bodies have been exhumed from shallow graves in the Shakahola Forest in southeastern Kenya, where members of the doomsday cult lived, the authorities said. While some died of starvation, others were strangled, beaten and suffocated, according to the lead government pathologist. Dozens of people have been rescued, but hundreds more are still missing, officials say.

For the last 16 months, the East African nation has been both riveted and horrified by the story of how one man was able to convince hundreds of people that the world was coming to an end and that they should follow him into a forest teeming with wild animals.

“The case before you, your honor, is not just for a trial, but for a reckoning,” Betty Rubia, one of the prosecutors, told the Mombasa chief magistrate, the Hon. Alex Ithuku, who is hearing the case. This “is about the exploitation of faith, the erosion of humanity and the chilling cost of blind devotion.”

At the Mombasa Law Courts last week, the suspects arrived chained in pairs — except for Mr. Mackenzie and his second-in-command, Smart Mwakalama, who each walked in alone and in handcuffs. In the humid, packed courtroom, the defendants sat looking forlorn, with some drifting to sleep as the proceedings got underway. None of the victims’ family members were there; many of them are day laborers lacking the time or money to attend hearings regularly, activists said.

A few of the suspects appeared weak; during a lunch break, a prison guard was heard voicing her concern to another officer about one defendant’s reluctance to consume the bread and milk she had been given.

One suspect died in jail, the authorities said last week, and an inquest was underway to determine the circumstances of that death.

As witnesses arrived, security officers, some carrying guns, stood shoulder-to-shoulder to prevent the suspects from seeing them. Prosecutors said they had lined up 90 witnesses, including minors, to take the stand in the case. Among them are 13 anonymous witnesses, referred to only by their initials, and whose voices were beamed from a speaker atop the enclosed witness booth.

One 17-year-old boy, identified as IA, described how families fell prey to the apocalyptic message of Mr. Mackenzie, who urged them to shun education, modern medicine and beauty products. The pastor also urged his flock to destroy any documents, including identity cards and birth certificates. The boy said his mother — whose remains have yet to be found — sold household items and was lured to Shakahola Forest with the promise of land, which could be had for as little as $20 an acre.

The gathering in the forest grew during the Covid-19 pandemic, with the expanding congregation building makeshift homes in areas given biblical names like Bethlehem and Jerusalem. There, witnesses said, at Mr. Mackenzie’s urging they began plans to starve the children first before the adults could join them.

As they deprived the children of food, parents would make them wear special clothing, they said.

“Those are my death clothes,” the 9-year-old told the still courtroom after she was shown an exhibit submitted as evidence inside the enclosed booth. The clothes were not shown to spectators in the courtroom.

She said she was wearing those clothes when officers rescued her. By then, her two younger siblings, whom she had tried to save by giving them water, had starved to death before her eyes.

The witnesses faced intense cross-examination from the defense lawyer, Lawrence Obonyo, who questioned their memory of events and where and when they heard Mr. Mackenzie say they should starve. Another witness, a 17-year-old girl identified as JCK, gave conflicting accounts about where they lived after her mother pulled her from school.

Activists and human rights groups have criticized the length of time prosecutors took in starting the trial, saying it could hamper the victims’ ability to deliver crucial testimony. Hearings in the trial will resume on Sept. 9.

They have also questioned the government’s choice of defendants. Some of those being tried “are victims themselves and should not have been charged,” said Shipeta Mathias, a rapid response officer with HAKI Africa, a Mombasa-based human rights organization. Mr. Mathias was among the emergency workers who arrived at Shakahola last year when some of the rescued church members were still refusing to eat.

“We had to lie to some of them that we had been sent by Jesus so they could eat,” he said of some of the defendants. “They are brainwashed, and they need help.”

The case has also shined an uncomfortable spotlight on the effectiveness of Kenya’s police force.

Families searching for their loved ones say they sought help from law enforcement, but in vain. Local community members, suspicious about the activities in the forest, filed numerous reports with the police, who failed to follow up or investigate. Rights groups also criticized the force for not monitoring Mr. Mackenzie, who was arrested several times and, at one point, even charged with radicalization and promoting extreme beliefs, though that case went nowhere.

Family members and their advocates say they are also frustrated with the slow rollout of DNA testing. Just three dozen bodies have so far been matched with family members, officials and activists say, disappointing those who want to give their loved ones the final dignity of a proper burial.

“What we need to get is justice for the people we lost,” said Paul Chengo, a manual laborer who said he was missing six members of his family. “What we need is closure.”

Mohamed Ahmed contributed reporting from Mombasa.

Nicaragua Shutters 1,500 Nonprofit Groups, Many of Them Churches

The Nicaraguan government on Monday canceled the legal status of 1,500 nonprofit organizations — many of them evangelical religious groups — in the authoritarian government’s continued effort to quash people and institutions that are not allied with the government.

More than 5,000 nonprofit organizations, including church groups, have been shut down in Nicaragua since 2018. Monday’s sweep of 1,500 civic and religious groups was by far the largest in a single day.

The measure came just days after the government banished from the country two Catholic priests who had been detained earlier this month.

Monday’s decision was notable because President Daniel Ortega’s government had until now focused its ire on the Roman Catholic Church, particularly in regions where high-profile bishops and priests had spoken out against human rights abuses.

Evangelical pastors had largely stayed out of the political fray. But the elimination of hundreds of their churches on Monday shows the Ortega administration is expanding its effort to silence religious leaders and close off any independent space not affiliated with the government, said Martha Patricia Molina, a Nicaraguan lawyer who tracks attacks against churches and clergy.

“All of their properties are going to be confiscated,” said Ms. Molina, who fled Nicaragua in 2021 and now lives in Texas. “This is an attack against religious freedom.”

Mr. Ortega and his wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, have presided over an increasingly autocratic regime that has seen them take control over virtually all government institutions, including the legislature, courts and elections.

In 2018, hundreds of thousands of people throughout the country protested against cuts to social security and eroding democracy in a quest to topple the government, but the pair responded with a tough crackdown. Hundreds of people were killed, imprisoned or forced out of the country.

Ms. Murillo, who serves as spokeswoman for the government, did not respond to a request for comment.

Since that uprising, nearly 250 priests, nuns, bishops and other members of the Catholic church were forced out of the country, according to a report that Ms. Molina released Friday. Some of them fled, but three bishops and 136 priests were expelled.

The region of Matagalpa traditionally had around 71 priests but now just 13 remain, she said.

A Jesuit university was shut down and taken over by the government last year, and in June this year, 20 Protestant churches were slammed with unexplained exorbitant fines.

The Nicaraguan Ministry of Interior closed the organizations this week, saying they had failed to meet their legal obligations to report their finances, according to a notice published in the Nicaraguan government’s legal register.

The notice listed the 1,500 organizations, which included hundreds of small faith groups, many of them affiliated with Pentecostal and Baptist churches.

The government uses a repressive legal framework to persecute Catholic and Protestant communities through arrest, imprisonment and the seizure of property, according to a June report by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a U.S. government commission that monitors the universal right to freedom of religion or belief abroad. Laws ostensibly meant to combat terrorism and money laundering are instead used to arbitrarily cancel the legal status and seize the property of such groups, the report said.

The government-controlled legislature passed several laws that created onerous financial reporting requirements for nonprofit organizations, making it difficult for them to comply. Even Catholic charity groups have found themselves faced with money laundering charges.

The June report by the U.S. commission said the government has engaged in increasingly repressive actions against Protestant communities. Members of the Evangelical Church and the Moravian Church were threatened, and their services were either prohibited or conspicuously monitored, the report said.

“I think that the church in Nicaragua has always been on the side of the truth,” said Félix Navarrete, a Nicaraguan lawyer and Catholic church activist who fled shortly after the 2018 uprising and is now the Hispanic ministry coordinator for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.

“One of the government’s biggest fears is that through religious leaders, the people of Nicaragua can have change,” he said. “They are trying to avoid that at all costs.”

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