The vice dictator of Nicaragua, Rosario Murillo, announced that her regime will send another thousand common inmates to family life They are being held in various prisons around the country.
«Fulfilling our Christian and solidarity commitment We are going to celebrate Nicaraguan Mothers’ Day with new family gatherings so that a thousand homes, a thousand families, a thousand mothers are reunited, we are reunited with people who will be legal beneficiaries of that status of family coexistence,” said Murillo in his meridian intervention by the official media this Friday, May 19.
The government spokesperson also detailed, without specifying how the number of pardons will be distributed, that the common prisoners that will be sent under this regime are from the Tipitapa, Granada, Chinandega, León, Matagalpa, Juigalpa, Estelí and Bluefields Penitentiary System.
Related news: Lawyers criticize pardons for common prisoners and hold Ortega responsible for the increase in crime
With these releases “families will celebrate a new opportunity to live well, to live correctly, to live better,” he added.
The dictatorship keeps 46 people in its prisons, whom it has imprisoned for the simple fact of expressing opinions against the Sandinista government. With these prisoners, the Sandinistas show neither compassion nor “Christianity.”
The new family coexistence will be awarded from Sunday May 28on the eve of Nicaraguan Mother’s Day, as is the custom of the dictatorship, Murillo said.
The release of common prisoners before serving their sentences has been criticized by feminist organizations, arguing that behind these benefits there is an increase in femicides and crime in general in Nicaragua.
A defender of the organization Católicas por el Derecho a Decidir denounced the team of Article 66that “every day there is more impunity” in the country, in reference to the men that the Ortega regime has released “without serving sentences, giving them pardons.”
The data on femicides in the country are “strong” because “the system is ordering women to be killed by not having a commitment to protect the lives of women and that the family does not have justice,” he said.
Between 2014 and 2022, the Nicaraguan government released 38,540 prisoners from prison, for an annual average of 4,282 parole orders decreed directly by the Executive.