Dictator Daniel Ortega annulled the appointment of Carlos Antonio Midence as Nicaraguan ambassador to Spain, six days after the regime announced its withdrawal from Madrid, alleging alleged pressure and interference by the Spanish authorities on the Nicaraguan official.
The Spanish Foreign Ministry clarified that Nicaragua withdrew its ambassador before he was expelled in response to the regime’s refusal to allow the Spanish ambassador María del Mar Fernández-Palacios to enter Managua.
This day, the Nicaraguan Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported that the regime accepted the resignation of Luis Samuel Wiltshire Hamilton, as attaché of the Nicaraguan Embassy in the United States, who had been in office since 2010.
The spokeswoman for the Rosario Murillo regime overflowed with praise for the Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI), after the meeting between Daniel Ortega and the president of that entity, Dante Mossi, held on Tuesday, March 15.
At the meeting, Mossi confirmed that he will continue to oxygenate the dictatorship and also praised Ortega’s management, assuring that the resources “are executed well and the Nicaraguan people must feel very pleased” with the new projects.
The price of the basic basket reached C$16,529 córdobas in the month of January, that is, about 463 dollars. The figure represents an increase of almost 300 cordobas or 8 dollars in a month.
The National Institute of Development Information (INIDE) reported that in February there were also increases in the price of beans, cooking oil, gasoline, diesel, and other products. According to economists, “inflation will continue to rise because it is unknown how the war in Ukraine will end.”
Related note: Nicaragua’s basic basket rises almost 300 córdobas in January
The Blue and White National Unity (UNAB) joined the demand for immediate freedom for former Vice Foreign Minister Víctor Hugo Tinoco, 69 years old. The relatives of the political prisoner raised their voice of alert due to the serious health condition of the former Sandinista guerrilla.
Tinoco mainly suffers from hypertension and heart rhythm disorders. The opposition demands urgent medical attention to avoid a fatal outcome like that of retired General Hugo Torres, who died in February in the regime’s police custody.
the indigenous leader Solomon Lopez Smith, 52, was the victim of “a heinous murder” at the hands of settlers, according to complaints. The Mayangna Territorial Government of Sauni Arungka, in the North Caribbean, reported that the indigenous body showed signs of torture, which translates “into a criminal and hateful act.”
Solomon Lopez, uncle of indigenous deputy Noe Coleman, had been missing for a week and although it was declared that he had been found alive, the version was discarded hours later. The corresponding authorities continue to remain silent in the face of the massacre of indigenous people in the Caribbean.