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Nicaraguan ex-military officer killed in exile in Costa Rica
Nicaraguan ex-military officer killed in exile in Costa Rica

Straits Times

time18 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Straits Times

Nicaraguan ex-military officer killed in exile in Costa Rica

SAN JOSE - Former Nicaraguan military officer Roberto Samcam was killed on Thursday in Costa Rica, where he was living in exile, his wife and opposition parties said. Samcam, a retired Sandinista major, was shot to death in his condo on the outskirts of the capital San Jose, his wife, Claudia Vargas, told Reuters. Samcam was a vocal critic of the Nicaraguan government led by President Daniel Ortega, which human rights groups and the U.N. have accused of carrying out a violent crackdown on dissidents. A Costa Rican police source confirmed Samcam's death to Reuters and said authorities were on the scene. The national police did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Nicaraguan government did not immediately respond to a request for comment. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Nicaraguan ex-military officer killed in exile, wife and party say
Nicaraguan ex-military officer killed in exile, wife and party say

Reuters

time18 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Reuters

Nicaraguan ex-military officer killed in exile, wife and party say

SAN JOSE, June 19 (Reuters) - Former Nicaraguan military officer Roberto Samcam was killed on Thursday in Costa Rica, where he was living in exile, his wife and the UNAMOS political party said. Samcam, a retired Sandinista major, was a vocal critic of the Nicaraguan government led by President Daniel Ortega. Costa Rica's national police did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Nicaraguan government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nicaragua ex-president Chamorro laid to rest in Costa Rica
Nicaragua ex-president Chamorro laid to rest in Costa Rica

The Sun

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Sun

Nicaragua ex-president Chamorro laid to rest in Costa Rica

SAN JOSÉ: Former Nicaraguan president Violeta Chamorro, who brought peace to the Central American country after years of war, was laid to rest Monday in Costa Rica two days after her death at age 95. The first woman president of the Americas, who defeated ex-guerrilla leader and current president Daniel Ortega in 1990 elections, died in exile in neighboring Costa Rica. Addressing her funeral mass in San Jose, her son Carlos Fernando Chamorro said he would take her ashes home to Nicaragua when it 'becomes a republic again' -- a swipe at the increasingly autocratic Ortega. During Chamorro's seven years as president between 1990 and 1997 she helped end a civil war that raged for much of the 1980s between US-backed 'Contra' rebels and Ortega's left-wing Sandinista government. She credited her victory with speaking to Nicaraguans in language 'typical of a homemaker and a mother.' She moved to Costa Rica in 2023 to be close to her children, three of whom are living in exile because of their opposition to Ortega. Ortega, 79, led Nicaragua for a decade after toppling a US-backed dictatorship in 1979. Since returning to power in 2007, he has shown increasingly authoritarian tendencies. He has seized control of all branches of government and shut down thousands of NGOs since major anti-government protests in 2018, which he branded a US-backed coup bid.

Chamorro, who brought peace to Nicaragua, dead at 95
Chamorro, who brought peace to Nicaragua, dead at 95

Observer

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Observer

Chamorro, who brought peace to Nicaragua, dead at 95

Violeta Chamorro, who brought peace to Nicaragua after decades of war and was the first woman elected president in the Americas, died on Saturday at the age of 95, her family said. Chamorro, who ruled the poor Central American country from 1990 to 1997, 'died in peace, surrounded by the affection and love of her children,' said a statement issued by her four children. As president, Chamorro managed to bring to an end a civil war that had raged for much of the 1980s as US-backed rebels known as the 'Contras' fought the leftist Sandinista government. That conflict made Nicaragua one of the big proxy battlegrounds of the Cold War. Chamorro put her country on the path to democracy in the difficult years following the Sandinista revolution of 1979, which had toppled the US-backed right-wing regime of Anastasio Somoza. In a country known for macho culture, Chamorro had a maternal style and was known for her patience and a desire for reconciliation. When she won the 1990 election at the head of a broad coalition, she defeated Daniel Ortega, the Sandinista guerrilla leader and icon who is now president again. Ortega has been in power for 17 years and is widely criticised by governments and rights groups as having crushed personal freedoms, all political opposition and judicial independence with autocratic rule. Chamorro died in Costa Rica, where she moved in 2023, to be close to her children, three of whom are living here in exile because of their opposition to Ortega. Chamorro — Nicaraguans referred to her affectionately as 'Dona Violeta' — had been living far removed from public life for decades. In her later years, she suffered from Alzheimer's disease. 'Her legacy is unquestionable,' said Felix Madariaga, a Nicaraguan academic and political activist living in exile in the United States. 'She led the transition from war to peace, healing a country destroyed by war. The contrast with Ortega is clear and deep,' said Madariaga. Chamorro was the widow of Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, who came from one of Nicaragua's most prominent families. — AFP

Violeta Chamorro obituary
Violeta Chamorro obituary

The Guardian

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Violeta Chamorro obituary

Like her political contemporary Corazon Aquino in the Philippines, Violeta Chamorro, who has died aged 95, was thrust into the limelight in Nicaragua – and ultimately, in 1990, to the presidency – because a dictator murdered her husband. He was Pedro Joaquín Chamorro, publisher of the family newspaper La Prensa, and for many years a serious irritant to the Somoza dictatorship that ruled in Nicaragua from 1936. After the assassination of Anastasio Somoza García in 1956, Pedro Joaquín was arrested on charges of rebellion and sent into internal exile. Never one for quiet acceptance of his fate, he escaped with Violeta to neighbouring Costa Rica. From there he organised a rebel force that in 1959 attempted to overthrow Anastasio's son Luis, who had succeeded as president. The attempt failed, and Pedro Joaquín was sentenced to a nine-year jail term. On his release, he went back to editing La Prensa. By the late 1960s, Anastasio Jr (also known as Tachito) had taken over from his brother Luis, but the situation in Nicaragua had deteriorated still further. In 1975, Tachito suspended civil rights. Pedro Joaquín not only campaigned against him through La Prensa, but he also took on a political role as head of the Democratic Liberation Union (Udel). Tachito had had enough. In January 1978, he sent his gunmen to machine-gun Pedro Joaquín to death on his way to work. The murder provoked a national uprising which led, the following year, to the overthrow by the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) of the 40-year-old dictatorship. As Pedro Joaquín's widow, Violeta Chamorro took over the newspaper. With it, she inherited an uncomfortable role as one of the principal leaders of the visible opposition. When the Sandinistas swept to power in July 1979, she became a member of the first, five-member transitional junta that controlled Nicaragua until the election of Daniel Ortega as president in 1984. But her conservative politics soon caused a split with the predominantly Marxist FSLN. Once more she was in opposition. As the rebellion mounted by the US-backed contra rebels grew stronger, the Sandinista government grew correspondingly less tolerant. La Prensa, accused of receiving CIA funds to destabilise the government, was again subjected to censorship. For a year it was closed down altogether. Like many Nicaraguan families, the Chamorros themselves were deeply divided. Of Violeta's four children, two were pro-Sandinista and two anti. Carlos Fernando edited the FSLN daily Barricada, and his sister Claudia was a Sandinista diplomat. Cristiana remained at La Prensa, while Pedro Joaquín Jr became a member of the contra leadership. The country's other main paper, the independent but pro-government Nuevo Diario, was edited by their uncle, Xavier. In the 1990 general election, held against a background of war, the FSLN faced a heterogeneous coalition of anti-Sandinista forces, ranging from communists to the far right. Known as the UNO, this shaky front needed a candidate capable of ousting Ortega — and the only viable option was Violeta Chamorro, who had little genuine political experience. One of the seven children of Amalia Torres and Carlos Barrios Sacasa, she was born into a well-to-do farming family in the southern town of Rivas. Sent as a teenager to a Catholic girls' school in the US before her marriage in 1950 to Pedro Joaquín Chamorro, she had acquired a knowledge of English and a certain grasp of world affairs. But perhaps her principal asset at the time of the 1990 election – leaving aside support from Washington – was her grandmotherly demeanour and apparent absence of guile. Much to the astonishment of most observers — not least the Sandinistas themselves – she beat Ortega handsomely and became the first elected female president in Latin American history. It was an unenviable job. More than a decade of war, coming on top of dictatorship, had wrecked what little infrastructure existed and reduced living standards in Nicaragua to the levels of the 30s. Forty per cent of the workforce was unemployed and there was a huge foreign debt. Inflation stood at more than 13,000%. Chamorro faced a hostile, mainly pro-FSLN, union movement, which staged a series of strikes, and a huge contra force, sceptical of her intentions. The Sandinista leaders used the transition period to transfer large amounts of state property into their own, private hands. Nonetheless, the new president could not govern without them. She agreed to leave Ortega's brother Humberto in charge of the army, provoking a split in the UNO coalition from which it did not recover. Throughout her seven-year term she was in effect obliged to rule in alliance with the FSLN, under the guidance of her politically savvy son-in-law, Antonio Lacayo – a de facto prime minister. Within months, she succeeded in persuading most of the contras to demobilise, in exchange for an offer of land. Ending the war, and beginning the process of national reconciliation, was probably her most lasting achievement. On the economic front she was not so successful. Her policies were based on the revival of the prostrate private sector and on a public sector reform programme that followed the standard, free-market, International Monetary Fund recipe. Burdened by debt and underdevelopment, plagued by natural disasters that included both drought and floods, Nicaragua stubbornly refused to advance, and by the end of Chamorro's term it seemed just as firmly stuck at the bottom of the Latin American pile. In January 1997, Chamorro handed the presidency to Arnoldo Alemán. It was only the second time in the country's history that one elected president had been succeeded by another. The celebration, however, was short-lived: within a few years Alemán was facing corruption charges, and in 2007 Ortega returned to office, and imposed a harsh crackdown on any opposition. Chamorro herself retired from active politics, though her family remained involved in public life. Since 2023 she had been receiving medical care in Costa Rica. She is survived by her children, and 12 grandchildren. Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, politician and newspaper proprietor, born 18 October 1929; died 14 June 2025

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