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Central American University - UCA |
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Number 457 | Julio 2019 |
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Nicaragua
An ultimatum to the dictatorship?
The OAS General Assembly
approved a resolution in Medellín on June 28
reiterating that Nicaragua’s constitutional
and democratic order has been altered
and giving Daniel Ortega 75 days to negotiate
an effective way out of the national crisis
with the Civic Alliance, this time in good faith.
It has all the earmarks of an ultimatum
from the highest level of that regional body.
Will Ortega understand it as such and respond?
Or will he continue imposing himself via repression,
prolonging the nation’s uncertainty until 2021
…or even beyond?... continuar...
Nicaragua
Nicaragua briefs
RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION
Abelardo Mata, the bishop of Estelí, went to the United States in late May to meet with the Nicaraguan diaspora in various cities. On May 30, he was invited to Washington... continuar...
Nicaragua
40 years of the Sandinista revolution: Could it have been different?
On the 40th anniversary of the overthrow of the Somoza dictatorship
envío invited one of the nine comandantes on the FSLN National directorate,
deputy minister of the interior and minister of the economy during the 1980s,
and in the leadership of the Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS) since 2005,
to share his assessment of the revolution his participation in it,
and his take on how we all got to this moment in which Daniel Ortega
has Nicaragua trapped in a dictatorial crisis with no clear or easy way out
given Ortega’s determination to remain in power at all cost.... continuar...
Nicaragua
The Ortega–Murillo partnership’s perverse repression and betrayal
This is a prologue by Elena Poniatowska,
the award-winning Mexican author,
for a new book by José Luis Rocha,
our long-time companion here at envío,
titled Self-organized and Plugged in –
University Students in Nicaragua’s April Rebellion and
published by Managua’s Central American University (UCA).
She recalls her first relationships with some Nicaraguans,
and, in the light of our country’s tragic reality,
severely condemns “Ortega’s perverse government.”... continuar...
Nicaragua
40 years later: How women from both sides experienced the revolution
With an attentive and empathetic ear,
the author interviewed
9 mothers and wives of soldiers
from the Nicaraguan Resistance;
4 mothers of Sandinista soldiers;
and 11 wives and mothers
who actively participated in the Revolution.
The author dedicates these stories in her book
to all women from both sides
and “to the Nicaraguan youth,
in the hope that they value and respect
the women of their story.”... continuar...
Nicaragua
Repression in the prisons and abuse in the courts
On June 19, José Miguel Vivanco,
director of Human Rights Watch Americas,
presented a report in Washington on the abuses
inflicted on Nicaraguan political prisoners.
In presenting it, Vivanco defined the ruling couple as
“international pariahs who have established a tyranny in Nicaragua.
For this reason international pressure cannot let up.
This regime only understands the language of pressure.”
The following are excerpts from that report.... continuar...
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