New peace talks in Nicaragua raise hopes, but many skeptical Talks over Nicaragua's political standoff are set to resume, with renewed hopes among those who believe they could help resolve the nearly year-old crisis, even as others worry that embattled President Daniel Ortega could use them to buy time

MANAGUA, Nicaragua -- A resumption of talks over Nicaragua's political standoff has raised hopes among those who believe it could help resolve the nearly year-old crisis and also caused some division among opponents to Daniel Ortega, with some saying they fear it could give "oxygen" to the embattled president.

The Roman Catholic Bishops' Conference has said it will participate as an observer in the talks that open Wednesday, while the government has yet to say whether Ortega or his wife, the powerful Vice President Rosario Murillo, will take part.

Nor has a time or location been made public, though speculation has centered on the headquarters of the Central American Institute for the Administration of Businesses, about 10 miles (15 kilometers) south of the capital, Managua. It's a school where young people receive business training, and student leaders sought refuge from police there during 2018's deadly protests.

"We are all going to meet in reconciliation and in affection," Murillo said Monday in one of her frequent appearances on official television. The official website El 19 said the talks would be between the government and the private business sector.

Ortega, a 73-year-old former guerrilla, announced last week that negotiations would take place "to consolidate peace," and the opposition group Civic Alliance said soon after that its delegation would comprise six businesspeople, two students, two academics, a politician and a feminist lawyer.

But that brought criticism from others in the opposition, in part because it did not include a farmworkers' movement that supported the student protests last year. Three of its leaders were given lengthy prison sentences related to their rural protests the same day Ortega announced the talks.

Other criticisms called for greater participation by students and women — the lawyer and one of the students are the only female opposition representatives to the talks, and both of them substitutes.

The opposition coalition said it will have four primary demands: the release of some 770 people it considers political prisoners; restoration of media freedoms following a crackdown on journalists and outlets critical of the president; electoral reform and an earlier date for elections now scheduled for 2021; and a plan to seek justice for protesters killed in the government crackdown, who number about 325 according to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

Those demands are widely shared across the opposition spectrum, but many say they should be preconditions for sitting down with the government rather than points of negotiation.

"Public freedoms and human rights are nonnegotiable," Vilma Nunez, president of the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights and a former official in Ortega's first Sandinista government from 1979 to 1990, told The Associated Press. "The government must respect them because they are principles established in the constitution."

"You have to give the dialogue a chance, but we have our reservations," she continued. "I think the Alliance acted hastily by accepting a negotiation, and that creates suspicions."

Nunez said she doesn't believe Ortega is approaching the dialogue in good faith and fears he will use the talks to buy time and "perpetuate himself in power."

Unlike in the previous talks, Roman Catholic officials will only be "witnesses," and Bishop Silvio Baez, auxiliary bishop in Managua and one of the church's most fervent voices in opposition to Ortega, will not take part.

Members of the Committee on Political Prisoners demanded they be allowed representation.

"Our children must be released before Wednesday. They are not a bargaining chip," said Carlos Silva, the father of a prisoner accused of "terrorism" for helping during the protests to tear down one of the symbolic "trees of life" sculptures that Murillo put up across Managua.

The protests that spurred the deadly crackdown last year by security forces and armed, pro-Ortega civilian groups have all but died out. But tensions remain, with hundreds of people behind bars, many more in hiding or in exile and government opponents denouncing ongoing persecution.

Nicaraguan media reported on Monday that the dead body of Bryan Aburto had been discovered. The 18-year-old student took part in the demonstrations and had fled to neighboring Costa Rica before returning to Nicaragua a week ago.

Civic Alliance leaders say Ortega is coming to the table weakened and hopes to burnish his image and avoid further sanctions from international organizations at a time when key ally Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela is under pressure from the region and beyond.

Ortega and allies in Nicaragua are also under threat of tough financial sanctions from the United States and the European Union.

"We will accompany you step by step," Luis Carrion, a former Sandinista commander who broke with Ortega, said in an open letter to the Civic Alliance, "but we will also ask for accountability and demand that you respond to the confidence we are entrusting with you."