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Pelican Eyes...Piedras y Olas Hotel & Resort

FALL 2007:  A LITTLE MORE POLITICAL RHETORIC

13 October 2007

Dear Friends,

As I raced to finish this before having to consider any more political surprises, I happened upon an excellent article in the October 11th Economist which contains some concise historical highlights together with some keen political observations and from which I borrow the lead line quote, “If there is a lesson to be learned from Che Guevara, it is that revolutionaries are well advised to die young lest they make fools of themselves.”

I take my direction from many sources but this last week I’ve watched what may well be my favorite owner, friend and counselor begin to get a bit shaky.  “Image,” he tells me pointedly, “Its all about how the US perceives Nicaragua now.”  And my friend is quite correct of course if we are looking primarily at a sales market.  But when we take a deep breath and look for the economic stability that strikes the most significant chord with our investors and with me, now a diehard Nicaraguan convert, we are doing better than OK. 

I’m confronted with the fact that when our owners contact me with concerns about the political situation it is frequently a challenge to know how to respond. If I say that, although we are watching closely what transpires, so far the climate has not fundamentally changed, I risk being seen as a Pollyanna. This challenge becomes greater, of course, when the president indulges his monomania. 

These past weeks have left me, more than once, wondering who is monitoring his meds. That a politician should say one thing on the stump and something else in a private meeting is commonplace. Sort of like Hillary Clinton’s southern accent in Alabama being so much thicker than when she is in New York. It’s just that in Ortega’s case it seems more like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

And then there is that monomania. In light of his psychotic antipathy for the US, I was gratified that he also vilified Europe in his latest outing. Still, he conflates the US and capitalism into his particular bête noire and given half a chance he starts foaming at the mouth.

He is not coherent on his best days but when the subject is the US he loses it. To hear that speech is to realize just how utterly he lives in the past, fulminating about Reagan and Bush, rambling backwards and forwards in history, lost in his fevered obsession.

The story is that his ministers had prepared a brief for the UN speech around an appeal for international assistance for the victims of hurricane Felix and an appeal for help rebuilding the devastated northeast of the country. They were racing to make calculations of what was needed. I cannot prove that it was Bush’s speech earlier that day that caused him to go off--- but coincidence? I think not.

For whatever reason, the work of his handlers went up the spout. He had his first opportunity on that podium in eighteen years and, instead of that all too justified appeal and all the other constructive things he could have done with his 20-plus minutes, he chose that moment to lose his mind.

One reason that, at least down here, the focus has been on the degree to which he screwed up, rather than the specific content is that he makes that speech at every opportunity and has been for over 25 years. He has, it is true, added another stock speech. The new one is on the theme of peace and reconciliation, his stump speech in the last campaign.

For whatever it’s worth, my take on that is that we are watching a creepier than usual struggle between head and heart. His rant is largely gibberish but I think he believes it. He is not an intelligent, and certainly not an educated, man. What he believes is what he has assembled from a relative handful of sources and as such men do, he takes them as gospel. Worse, he thinks he has stumbled across an original idea, a unique insight.

The degree to which he is incapable of evolving beyond where he left off the last time is pretty amazing. On the other hand, apparently he has been counseling Chavez against confiscating everything – advice un-followed in the event. But we are not seeing the kind of shift Peru has seen in her once wild-eyed Garcia – disastrous first presidency, sweet reason in this one.

Also, Ortega has a history of vilifying those with whom he is about to make a deal. He called Union Fenosa every kind of epithet and then gave them a better deal than the one they had. He rants and rails about the IMF and then signs a new agreement with the Fund, shortly after feverishly denouncing global capitalists in his UN speech. He has vilified the PLC and Alemán in mumbled vituperative and yet he and they have colluded in a malignant bi-partisanship that has held strong for the last five years.  

He attacks Cafta at every opportunity and yet it only became law with the votes of the Frente. It may be a classic example of holding one’s nose while voting, but they voted for it. What’s more, his consul to San José actively campaigned against the vote to ratify Cafta in Costa Rica’s recent referendum but as soon as it passed, he called Oscar Arias to congratulate him and to say how he hoped this would speed integration of the Central American countries.

Then there are the Cenis, the bonds that have been such a bone of contention. Basically, back at the end of Alemán’s mandate, both parties crashed banks in w

hich they were principals, right after they had looted them. In order to preserve confidence in what was left of the banking system, the government sold bonds to pay for the cost of guaranteeing deposits.

As Eduardo Montealegre has become a more potent force in opposition, the pactistas, Alemán and Ortega, have twisted themselves in knots trying to link Montealegre to the sale of the bonds and use it to place him in legal jeopardy. It is a farce but a pretty compelling demonstration that they are genuinely threatened. They can read polls, too.

Some of the more rabid members of the Frente took it in mind to posit that if the bonds were used for illicit gain then the government doesn’t have to honor them. This began with the dark and brooding Attorney General they got from Central Casting. The mob loved that idea, drool was everywhere.

At which point the Sandinista head of the Central Bank quietly but firmly said that, yes, the government would honor the bonds as scheduled. Bank President Antenor Rosales carries considerably more weight than Attorney General Estrada. In the interim, of course, the bonds suffered and that is the part that makes the papers.

Meanwhile the government continues to-ing and fro-ing. In part because few of the people serving have any qualifications for their jobs – this is not entirely unique to the current government, although this new bunch really are pretty hopeless.

I’ve already spoken of the incessant and apparently deeply internalized divisions in the man’s own mind, and this is not helping create coherence, moreover there is also the split within Frente ranks. There are three currents among the Sandinistas, one led by Rosario Murillo, one by Bayardo Arce and one led by Lenin Cerna, more about whom in due course.

Many of the real fire-breathers are allied with the first lady and Rosario is one determined first lady.  It was about this group that the current, Sandinista, mayor was speaking – after some of them demanded that he be purged form the party – when he laconically observed that ‘some [Sandinistas] are more Sandinista.’

Managua’s mayor is not the only local Sandinista official to have balked. Rosario’s pet project to create citizen’s counsels to run everything was voted down but it had already stirred up a hornets’ nest. Not surprisingly, Sandinista city counselors, mayors, government ministers, and members of the Asemblea took a very dim view of the prospect of a bunch of rag-tag party workers bossing them around. Rosario is trying to push forward anyway but thus far she is running into heavy weather.

Bayardo Arce is the voice of pragmatism. He is in charge of party finances and I do not mean the official treasury, he’s the guy that runs Sandinista, Inc. He is estranged from Rosario, as is Lenin Cerna and most of the old guard, now calling themselves Generation 80 – only two of the original junta still support Ortega. She’s wild-eyed and they have an eye on their balance sheets.

Lenin Cerna is a street-fighter, he was head of internal security in the old days and now, well, his role is not really a public one. It was he around which some of the biggest recent noise revolved. He sent Gerardo Miranda, the more or less thug ex-mayor of San Juan del Sur and current deputy, to meet with the owners of Arenas Bay. It was Miranda who was recorded making extortion demands. Those owners took a copy of the tape, along with the father-in-law of one of the investors and ALN deputy, Alejandro Bolaños, to the cops.  

The Latins have an expression, to touch one’s testicles, as in ‘he touched my testicles.’ This is to indicate that someone has gone too far, has done the unthinkable. Alejandro Bolaños touched Lenin Cerna’s testicles. This became a huge scandal and all hell broke loose. Marena shut down the development, Bolaños and the others face 600 denunciations. No doubt cooler heads would have preferred that the whole thing go away but Cerna’s ego was involved and the party be damned.

Since then, Marena has quietly backed off. The people involved, however, continue to face all kinds of harassment, Bolaños was illegally thrown out of the Asemblea and the guy that made the original charges is himself being charged. We’ll see what happens eventually but the ferocity of the reaction was very specific, not indicative of some general assault against investors.

The situation in Corinto was about Ortega being bound and determined that the Esso facility would handle Venezuelan oil and Esso resisting. Esso had only just been shoved out of Venezuela. In both cases thuggery was involved and I am not sanguine about that. On the other hand it would not be reasonable to think that these were more broadly indicative, the evidence does not support that conclusion.

The problem with land may continue for while.. And, of course, the entire issue has been politicized beyond credence. The thing is, apart from the specific excesses of the revolution and its aftermath; most of these land problems are identical to those in countries all over the developing world.

And I am not willing myself to hope. I am basing hope on the fact that there is a strong, perhaps overwhelming, desire within many in the Frente for economic stability. The Ortega-Murillos are not the only ones who have acquired a lot of middle-class comfort. Many of these have invested heavily in property development and are planning more investments. Their future prosperity depends on investor confidence, just as our investments do.

This is not some optimistic assumption, I mean it literally, they will be hurt as badly as every one of us if things go south. And, as I say, none stand to lose more than the Ortega-Murillos. They have a lot of children and they like their hard-won, nouveau riche status. 

I have every confidence that this accounts for much of Ortega’s duality. It also accounts for his and others’ efforts to find an alternative to global capitalism and global capitalism’s poster boy, the US.

He and Chavez and Kirchner and Correa and the unfortunate Evo Morales, all want a way around the existing financial institutions. Kirchner has managed without the IMF solely because Chavez is buying hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Argentine bonds. And, aside from ego, Chavez is doing this because he wants to stick it to Uncle Sam.

Even Chavez understands that this can only be a stop-gap, what they need is Mercorsur to preclude any hemispheric trading regime that includes the US, and Alba to knock the stuffing out of DR-Cafta. They suffered a disappointment recently when Chavez’s proposal to found a new international development bank to counter the IMF fell flat. Nevertheless hope springs eternal.

All this is interesting because it signifies a tacit recognition that they cannot do without the global financial structures unless they can replace them.  As any of their attempts thus far have not come to anything, Ortega is left muttering about how they want to trade with everybody… we are the world...

I am convinced that this constant, nagging frustration accounts in no small part for his periodic explosions of frothy idiocy. But the underlying fact is that if he could tell the US and her investors to go to hell, I have no doubt that he would, in a heartbeat. The reason he gets all tied-up in knots is that he knows that he cannot.

There will be hiccups and the young Turks, those ‘more Sandinista’ hot-heads from time to time will take him at his word and there will have to be some scrambling to sort it out. This has already happened and no doubt will again.  I understand that these hiccups are not helpful, believe me I understand, but they are not actually indicative of looming catastrophe.

That could change but at this point I do not see it. These guys have a long history of putting personal gain over ideological purity.

I know that real estate agents are quoted as saying business is off by 20 to 50 percent but they would be more credible if they could decide which. And, between you and me, some of them are part of the problem. They are inexperienced, many of them, at presenting real estate. They cannot be bothered to learn anything about the properties or sustain credible presentations; they just want to lick up the cream. I know of an informal study where owners of a project had their marketing guy call and inquire about available properties and half the time the agents couldn’t be bothered even to mention all the major projects.

On the other hand, the economy is growing at nearly 4%, between 3.7 and 3.9, they say. The new ConeDenim Mills facility will be enormous and they are already underway with it. Exports are up over 30% this year, tourism is up 50% since 2000, and the World Bank just announced they were releasing $240 Million in new credits, as a vote of confidence in the government’s fiscal management. I know, even I was surprised.

Another telling measure is that big development projects are underway, or planned, including the giant Guacalito project by Grupo Pellas. Plus, not incidentally, still others in which the investors are Sandinistas.

Along with the failure of the law to create his, or rather Rosario’s, citizen committees, the hugely problematic law of the waters failed and other set-backs to their agenda are coming up. Absent real popular support, Ortega’s power depends mainly on control of the electoral commission and the courts. His continued control of both depends on the continuing cooperation of Alemán. This could become problematic; is becoming problematic.

It would be erroneous to suppose that Alemán is only going along with Ortega because of the hold Ortega has over Alemán’s legal situation. No doubt Alemán would have balked at some of what the Sandinistas have gotten up to, had he not been thus in Ortega’s grip, but they formed their initial pact when no such leverage yet existed. They cooperate because they are expedient men.

Nevertheless, as the headline for a new poll said, ‘Alemán in Free Fall.’ He has lost ground even since the last poll and that is largely because hitherto he had enjoyed the support of a core group of die-hard Arnoldistas and lately even these are deserting him. At long last.

At the PLC’s annual jamboree, Alemán, functioning as chairman, rode roughshod over several prominent party members. When one of his closest – and most slimy – adherents was introduced, the crowd booed. Arnoldo’s hand-picked crowd booed. Then it happened again with another crony. Despite his adamant objections, the crowd more than once voted against his will, until he cut them off.

Simultaneously, Alemán humiliated the head of his party in the Asemblea and then also went after the man in the party most popular with the folks, the men and women in the towns and villages. Both men sat there and took these dressing-downs and, it has become apparent, became very angry. There is open revolt in several provincially important towns, including some in the party’s heartland.

These rebels are forming ad hoc alliances with the other, now larger, liberal faction, the ALN.  One such powerful alliance combines in the form of the Gran Unidad de Fuerzas Democráticas where the (ALN) La Alianza Liberal Nicaragüense, the (Apre) Alianza por la República, the (PLI) the (PC) Partido Liberal Independiente, Partido Conservador, and certain key members of the (PLC) Partido Liberal Constitucionalista (there is that blackmail element which binds the minds of the PLC’s congress), came together against Ortega’s proposed constitutional reforms.  I choose to see this as a re-awakening of the concept of less party ego and some of the same grim determination to prevail that helped bring Doña Violeta to power over Ortega in 1999.

At the national level Alemán is frantically working to hold onto his power, fighting off every attempt at an alignment. In a new poll, 60% of the country wanted a coalition of the liberal opposition, versus just 28% who did not; and over 75% wanted Alemán to have nothing to do with it. What’s more, 70% of those polled think he should be serving his sentence in prison.

One may quibble with polls all day long but when they track so closely to events on the ground, it tends to lend credence. By way of contrast, ALN leader Eduardo Montealegre enjoys favorable public opinion from fully 64.3%. Ortega’s support, meanwhile, has fallen to 33%, or 5% fewer than voted for him. Now that I think of it, he and Bush are both at 33%.

There is wide and growing support, 76.5%, to strip the corrupt and incompetent electoral commission of its control of granting cedulas, the all important ID for everything from cashing a check to voting.

Hundreds of thousands of people are without ID because they might vote the wrong way, and the commission steadfastly refuses to give cedulas to Nicas living overseas. Guess how those folks would be likely to vote. Support for these people -- many of whom send money to family here, in no small measure keeping the country afloat -- is now up to 87% in favor of their ‘cedulization’.

Anything is possible in the land where lead floats and corks sink but it is difficult to imagine how things are going to work out the way Alemán and Ortega intend.    

In these last few days the long awaited decision from the International Court on the matter of Nicaragua’s maritime border with Honduras finally was handed down. Honduras’ new president Manuel Zelaya has been stretching his populist wings and he and Ortega were holding a love-in when it was announced.

The Court carefully split the difference but that constitutes a substantial improvement on the status quo ante, a deal cooked up between a past Honduran government and the Colombians. Honduras got to keep a couple of small cays but the border was moved well north. One member of the government pointed out that that part of the Caribbean is thought to have about 88 billion barrels of oil under the seabed.     

A couple of nights ago the president went to INCAE, the business school, to meet with the most prominent Nicaraguan members of the business class. They were very clear that the government must improve the investment climate and they offered cogent suggestions on how he might do that. Not least they want to maintain an ongoing dialogue from here on. Ortega, for his part, talked of how the government was working to get past rationing of electricity. The cuts should diminish in November and end in the coming year, with the installation of new plants from Venezuela and Taiwan.

He also announced that, along with the $220 million on tap from the US, the new accord with the IMF and the just granted World Bank credits worth $240 million for 2007-2012, Europe has just approved $303 million for the next five years. Thankfully, we know that all of these come with strings and conditions that the government must continue to meet.

So, when we step back and take in the whole broad panorama of events, everything considered, things just don’t look that bad. Please believe me when I say that I take seriously every hiccup along the way but, being here, I also get a much wider context.

It is possible that I am whistling in the dark but then there are a lot of us whistling the same tune.  All of us are paying the closest attention to all this but, so far, things are probably better than most of us feared they would be, those first few days after the election, before we regained the power of speech. 

As these are simply my opinions please don’t shoot any of the wonderful folks around Piedras y Olas here if you disagree.  Oh and one last thing--- after you read this do me a favor please and burn your computer.

With spirit, hope and in line with our continuing vision,

Chris


 

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