SAO PAULO — Brazil's government kicked out Nicaragua's ambassador Thursday in retaliation for a similar move by the Central American country's President Daniel Ortega.
Brazil's foreign ministry said it had decided to expel Nicaraguan Ambassador Fulvia Patricia Castro Matu in "application of the principle of reciprocity to the measure adopted by the Nicaraguan government about the Brazilian ambassador in Managua.'' The ministry's statement said Brazil's Ambassador Breno da Costa has already left the country.
Nicaragua's government said both the Nicaraguan and the Brazilian ambassadors have left their positions, but did not mention they were kicked out or elaborate on the reasons for those moves.
A rift between Ortega and Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, two former allies, has grown over the last year.
Two diplomatic sources in Brasilia told the AP that Nicaragua's government protested two weeks ago over da Costa's absence from celebrations of the 45th anniversary of Nicaragua's Sandinista revolution, opening the way to expel him.
Ortega, whose critics see him as an authoritarian leader, was a guerrilla fighter in that movement.
The sources, who spoke under condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the matter publicly, added that the Brazilian ambassador was following orders from the foreign ministry.
The foreign ministry hadn't previously confirmed local media reports of the Brazilian ambassador's expulsion.