President George W. Bush spoke
Monday on a commitment with the democracy with salient
president of Nicaragua Enrique Bolaños and elect president
Daniel Ortega who will assume the position Wednesday,
informed the White House.
The spokesman Gordon Johndroe said
that Bush expressed to Bolaños its gratefulness to him by
the services to its country, its commitment with the
democracy and friendship with the United States.
In char it with Ortega, Bush took
advantage of the occasion to congratulate it to him and the
Nicaraguan town by its commitment with the democracy.
The President expressed his firm
commitment to him with the well-being of the Nicaraguan town
and our continuous interest in a relation with Nicaragua,
said Johndroe.
It indicated that Bush made him
notice to Ortega the areas of cooperation in the Free Trade
Agreement with Central America and Dominican Republic (Dr-Cafta)
and Cuenta of the Challenge of the Millenium, in which
Nicaragua had a program of about 600 million dollars in
donations.
The President also noticed that
the reconciliation, unit, democracy and creation of uses -
the agenda of Daniel Ortega in the electoral campaign is
areas of possible cooperation, added.
Bolaños was a firm promoter of the
Cafta approved by the American Congress in 2005, but also
she has been in Washington to speak on the obstacles to his
government who Ortega was putting to him from the Congress
with a series of reforms that gave to the sandinista leader
the control of the main institutions of the country.
The reforms were posponed until
February of this year by a mission of the Organization of
the States Americanos and Bolaños could culminate his
government without greater slips.
Ortega was an opened opponent of
the United States in the Eighties in which she governed
Nicaragua. They were times of the Fría War and the United
States supported to the calls cons to fight it in an
operation that almost costs the Presidency to Ronald Reagan
with the Iran-Contras scandal.