Ninety Crucial Days for Nicaragua’s Future
The next 90 days will determine whether Nicaragua will have free, transparent and competitive elections on November 7th.
The next 90 days will determine whether Nicaragua will have free, transparent and competitive elections on November 7th.
Ortega & Murillo tried to “launder” the crime, covering up the theft of Confidencial’s offices as a health service, but they left footprints.
The latest report from Transparency International, on corruption in the public sector, places Nicaragua among the most corrupt.
The solution isn’t proclaiming abstention but rekindling civil resistance until the police state is suspended, and there is electoral reform.
“Our occupied newsroom is in the minds and hearts of the reporters, and in the decision to not accept censorship or self-censorship.”
“I’m not very optimistic. I don’t envision a radical change in the next 2 or 3 years,” warns Luis Vicente Leon, director of Datanalisis.
If Ortega would like a reconciliation with the truth, he should suspend the police state and free the political prisoners.
Jorge Ramos: The winner won’t be known on Tuesday, “unless there’s a Biden landslide.” The mail-in ballots must be counted first.
On Tuesday, October 27, the Nicaraguan National Assembly, dominated by the Sandinista party machine, approved the “Special Cybercrimes Law”.
“The increased mortality is directly or indirectly related to COVID-19,” confirms Dr. Ciro Ugarte, who directs the PAHO Department of Health Emergencies.