The Ortega dictatorship’s judiciary also stated that Father Uriel Antonio Vallejos, who managed to leave Nicaragua and has been living in exile in Costa Rica for a few months, is accused “of the same crimes” for which “the official letter to INTERPOL for his capture remains in effect.”

During the early morning hours of Aug. 19, 2022, the Nicaraguan police broke into the chancery of the Diocese of Matagalpa and arrested Bishop Álvarez, who has been one of the most vocal critics of the dictatorial regime of Daniel Ortega, which has ruled Nicaragua for more than 15 years.

Hours later, the police revealed that they had transferred the bishop to Managua and were holding him under house arrest.

Nicaraguan lawyer Yader Morazán, a human rights defender living in exile in the United States, in a Twitter post blasted Judge Gloria Saavedra as “today’s executioner.”

“She is one of the new appointments of 2019, replacing the first executioners who tried the protesters of 2018 and who were promoted to magistrates. She has not even had a judicial career, because she was a coordinator,” the lawyer said.

In the Nicaraguan judicial system, judicial facilitators also known as coordinators “are community leaders, volunteers, with a community spirit at the service of the administration of justice. They do not judge cases, they are not public defenders, they are not prosecutors.”