Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 99 Part 1.djvu/274

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PUBLIC LAW 99-000—MMMM. DD, 1985

99 STAT. 252

PUBLIC LAW 99-83—AUG. 8, 1985 (2) THE GOVERNMENT OP NICARAGUA.—The Congress further

Human rights.

International agreements. 59 Stat. 1031. 2 UST 2394. 62 Stat. 1681.

finds that— (A) the Government of National Reconstruction of Nicaragua formally accepted the June 23, 1979, resolution as a basis for resolving the Nicaraguan conflict in its "Plan to Achieve Peace" which was submitted to the Organization of American States on July 12, 1979; (B) the June 23, 1979, resolution and its acceptance by the Government of National Reconstruction of Nicaragua was the formal basis for the removal of the Somoza regime and the installation of the Government of National Reconstruction; (C) the Government of National Reconstruction, now known as the Government of Nicaragua and controlled by the Frente Sandinista (the FSLN), has flagrantly violated the provisions of the June 23, 1979, resolution, the rights of the Nicaraguan people, and the security of the nations in the region, in that it— (i) no longer includes the democratic members of the Government of National Reconstruction in the political process; (ii) is not a government freely elected under conditions of freedom of the press, assembly, and organization, and is not recognized as freely elected by its neighbors, Costa Rica, Honduras, and El Salvador; (iii) has taken significant steps towards establishing a totalitarian Communist dictatorship, including the formation of FSLN neighborhood watch committees and the enactment of laws that violate human rights and grant undue executive power; (iv) has committed atrocities against its citizens as documented in reports by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States; (v) has aligned itself with the Soviet Union and Soviet allies, including the German Democratic Republic, Bulgaria, Libya, and the Palestine Liberation Organization; (vi) has Committed and refuses to cease aggression in the form of armed subversion against its neighbors in violation of the Charter of the United Nations, the Charter of the Organization of American States, the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance, and the 1965 United Nations General Assembly Declaration on Intervention; and (vii) has built up a n army beyond the needs of immediate self-defense, a t the expense of the needs of the Nicaraguan people and about which the nations of the region have expressed deepest concern, (3) THE NICARAGUAN DEMOCRATIC OPPOSITION.—The Congress

further finds that— (A) as a result of these violations, the Government of Nicaragua has lost the support of virtually all independent sectors of Nicaraguan society who initially supported the removal of the Somoza regime (including democratic political parties of the left, center, and right; the leadership of the Church; free unions; and the business, farmer, and