Nicaragua: A Year after the Occupation of Confidencial, they Never Silenced Us
Despite the threats and repression of the dictatorship, the independent press resists in Nicaragua, continuing to do journalism at the service of the truth.
Read MoreDespite the threats and repression of the dictatorship, the independent press resists in Nicaragua, continuing to do journalism at the service of the truth.
Read MoreThe application of torture and extreme cruelty as a systematic arm of repression is the final phase of the FSLN’s moral decomposition.
Read More“I’m back to do journalism from here in Nicaragua”, and “demand the full restoration of democratic freedoms in our country.”
Read MoreDaniel Ortega threatens, orders, and commands, but no longer governs. He has no solution to offer the country.
Read MoreCarlos F. Chamorro looks at the similarities and differences in the civic rebellions in Bolivia and Nicaragua.
Read MoreThe latest projections of the World Bank confirm that Nicaragua will have an economic contraction of -5% this year, that is, a greater drop than -3.8% registered last year.
Read MoreThis September, it has been a year since the imposition of a de facto state of emergency in Nicaragua, which has effectively suspended constitutional rights, without the National Assembly having decreed a state of emergency by law.
Read MoreWhen the political change arrives, after free elections, the new democratic government won’t only have to disarm and dismantle the paramilitary and oversee a total change in the National Police, but they will also have to change the Attorney General’s office from the ground up.
Read MoreThis past Tuesday, during the anniversary of the Naval Force celebrated with the top brass of the Nicaraguan Army, the dictator Daniel Ortega revived his promise to build an interoceanic canal, which according to his official plans should already be about to be inaugurated this year 2019.
Read MoreDaniel Ortega’s regime confirmed Thursday that the President of the Republic does not govern in Nicaragua. Instead, he orders and commands, as the supreme chief of the National Police, who remains in power through a police state.
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