Remembering the student led protests in Nicaragua
Nicaragua is in mourning. Protests and repression mark one year of resistance. |
Six years ago in Nicaragua on April 18, 2018 long standing frustrations with the Sandinista regime of Daniel Ortega erupted across Managua in response to a "reform" of the pension system that reduced them for current recipients while raising the amount taken from salaries of current workers. At 5:00pm "Sandinista youth" and national police attack protesters, destroyed commercial establishments and took over the Central American University. The following day classes were canceled across the country and the government continued to call on the police and the Sandinista youth to counter-protest.
On Saturday, April 21, 2018 journalist Ángel Gahona was shot in the head while conducting a live broadcast of the protests in Bluefields, Nicaragua.
Ángel Eduardo Gahona, killed while reporting protests |
On Sunday, April 22, 2018 with over 25 confirmed dead Ortega rescinds the "reform." This would have ended the protests on April 18, 2018, but after the thuggish behavior of the regime combined with the wholesale violation of freedom of the press, freedom of expression and association the citizenry was aroused.
Tens of thousands protested against Ortega regime on April 28 |
On Tuesday, April 24, 2018 the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) of the Organization of American States issued a statement in which they condemned "the deaths of at least 25 people in a context of repression of protests against plans to reform the social security system in Nicaragua." The IACHR also made known that "four TV channels that were reporting on the protests were taken off the air following government orders."
Photos of seven of the youth killed in Nicaragua during anti-government protests |
The death toll would continue to mount over the upcoming days and weeks.
Wednesday, May 30, 2018 was Mother's Day in Nicaragua, and it is a day traditionally of great celebrations across the country. Nicaraguan mothers marched on this day to remember the children, who were among the 80 killed since the start of the protests at that time. Pro-government para-police called "shock forces" and armed third parties fired on the non-violent demonstrators. Official reports are that 15 people were killed and 199 were injured in Managua, Estelí and Masaya.
Moms in Nicaragua peacefully protested for children killed by government. |
By July 14, 2018 the Sandinista regime's
campaign of extrajudicial killings and political terror to hang on to power had reached new lows. 350 Nicaraguans
had been reported killed, 169 disappeared and 3,000 have been wounded
by police agents since the protests began reported
Nicaraguan student leader Victor Cuardas. At least 20 people were
killed on July 8, the Economist reported, and reports of new killings flooded social media every day.
However one aspect that is not being widely reported is that Nicaraguan
torture victims have disclosed hearing Venezuelan and Cuban accents in
the regime's secret prisons. The Miami Herald quoted Nicaraguan student leader Victor Cuadras on July 13, 2018:
“Castro copied his recipe for repression and harassment in Venezuela, and now they are doing it in Nicaragua. There are many people who, while being tortured, heard the accents of Venezuela and Cuba in the clandestine prisons.”
Two day later the São Paulo Forum gathered in Havana, Cuba and backed Daniel Ortega and the Sandinista regime despite their slaughter of civilians.
Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua and Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela |
Agence France Press reported on July 27, 2018
that more than a dozen doctors, nurses, and technical staff in a public
hospital in Nicaragua were fired because they treated wounded
anti-government protesters. The Associated Press reported that eight public hospital doctors in Nicaragua said Friday that they have been
fired after violating alleged orders not to treat wounded protesters
opposing President Daniel Ortega’s government.
Despite all of this the protests continued and students continued to put their lives on the lines. There are more than 600 identified political prisoners. On September 10, 2018 Amaya Coppens, a fifth year medicine student at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de León in Nicaragua was arrested and accused of "terrorism." She was arbitrarily detained along with
Sergio Alberto Midence Delgadillo by hooded police that used violence to
detain them, and taken away in a van. Amaya was finally freed on December 31, 2019. She had suffered ill treatment during her arbitrary detention, but refused to remain silenced, continued her activism, and called for an international probe into the abuses of the Ortega government.
Amnesty International estimated that 322 Nicaraguans had been killed "as of September 18, 2018, most of them caused by gunshots to the head, neck, and torso."
Six years later, and we remember this day of freedom, the repression that followed, and the struggle that continues for freedom in Nicaragua.
Today, as we commemorate Nicaraguan Freedom Day, we are reminded of the bonds that unite us across different backgrounds and experiences. Miami-Dade County's declaration today is more than a symbolic gesture—it is a reaffirmation of our shared commitment to the principles of… pic.twitter.com/fQAeIHXFBu
— Félix Maradiaga (@maradiaga) April 18, 2024
Human Rights Foundation also observed this important date in Nicaraguan history.
1/ Today marks the 5th anniversary of the 2018 anti-government protests in Nicaragua. Citizens took to the streets opposing social security reforms and demanding President Daniel Ortega’s resignation. pic.twitter.com/AqYdd7tQHl
— Human Rights Foundation (@HRF) April 18, 2024
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