'José Daniel Ortega Saavedra' (born
11 November 1945) is the current
President of Nicaragua. For much of his life, he has been an important leader in the
Sandinista National Liberation Front (''Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional'' or ''FSLN'').
After a popular rebellion resulted in the overthrow and exile of
Anastasio Somoza Debayle in 1979, Ortega became a member of the ruling multipartisan
junta and was later elected president, serving from 1985 to 1990. His first period in office was characterized by socialist policies, internal dissent, hostility from the
United States, and armed rebellion by U.S.-backed
Contras.
Ortega was defeated by
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro in the 1990 presidential election, but he remained an important figure in Nicaraguan opposition politics. He was an unsuccessful candidate for president in 1996 and 2001 before winning the
2006 presidential election.
[1]
Personal life
Early years
Ortega was born to a middle-class family in
La Libertad, department of
Chontales,
Nicaragua. His parents, Daniel Ortega and Lidia Saavedra, were in opposition to the regime of
Anastasio Somoza Debayle, and he was arrested for his own political activities at the early age of 15. In
1963 he attended the
Universidad Centroamericana in
Managua and quickly joined the then-underground
FSLN.
[2] Ortega was imprisoned in 1967 for taking part in a
bank robbery, he was released in late 1974 along with other Sandinista prisoners in exchange for
Somocista hostages. After being released and serving 7 years in prison Ortega was exiled to
Cuba, where he received several months of
guerrilla training, he later returned to Nicaragua secretly.
[3] Ortega married
Rosario Murillo in 2005, the mother of his eight children.
[4] She is currently the government's spokeswoman.
The Sandinista Revolution (1979-1990)
''For more details on Ortega’s past presidency, see
Sandinista National Liberation Front.''
When Somoza was overthrown by the FSLN in July 1979, Ortega became a member of the five-person
Junta of National Reconstruction, which also included Sandinista militant
Moisés Hassan, novelist
Sergio Ramírez Mercado, businessman
Alfonso Robelo Callejas, and
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, the widow of a martyred journalist. The FSLN came to dominate the junta, Robelo and Chamorro resigned, and Ortega became the ''
de facto'' ruler of the country.
In 1981,
U.S. President
Ronald Reagan condemned the FSLN for joining with
Soviet-backed
Cuba in supporting
Marxist revolutionary movements in other Latin American countries such as
El Salvador. The Reagan Administration authorized the
CIA to begin financing, arming and training rebels, some of whom were former officers from Somoza's National Guard, as anti-Sandinista guerrillas. These were known collectively as the
Contras. This also led to one of the largest political scandals in US history, (Iran-Gate or the
Iran Contra Affair), when
Oliver North and several members of the Reagan Administration defied the
Boland Amendment, and going against the
US Congress, helped sell arms to
Iran, using the proceeds to fund the
Contras. Between 1980 and 1989, over 30,000 Nicaraguans died in the conflict between the Sandinista government and the Contras.
[5]
In November 1984, Ortega called national elections; he won the presidency with 63% of the vote and took office on
January 10,
1985. According to the vast majority of independent observers, the 1984 elections were perhaps the freest and fairest in Nicaraguan history. A report by an Irish parliamentary delegation stated: "The electoral process was carried out with total integrity. The seven parties participating in the elections represented a broad spectrum of political ideologies." The general counsel of New York's Human Rights Commission described the election as "free, fair and hotly contested." A study by the U.S. Latin American Studies Association (LASA) concluded that the FSLN (Sandinista Front) "did little more to take advantage of its incumbency than incumbent parties everywhere (including the U.S.) routinely do."
Thirty-three percent of the Nicaraguan voters cast ballots for one of six opposition parties – three to the right of the Sandinistas, three to the left – which had campaigned with the aid of government funds and free TV and radio time. Two conservative parties captured a combined 23 percent of the vote. They held rallies across the country (a few of which were disrupted by FSLN supporters) and blasted the Sandinistas in terms far harsher than
Walter Mondale's 1984 critiques of incumbent U.S. President Reagan. Most foreign and independent observers noted this pluralism in debunking the Reagan administration charge – prominent in the U.S. press – that it was a "Soviet-style sham" election.
[6] Some opposition parties
boycotted it, under pressure from U.S. embassy officials, and it was denounced as being unfair by the
Reagan administration.
[7] Reagan thus maintained that he was justified to continue supporting the Contras' "democratic resistance".
[8]
Interim years
In the 1990 presidential election, Ortega lost to
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, his former colleague in the junta. Chamorro was supported by a 14-party anti-Sandinista alliance known as the
National Opposition Union (Unión Nacional Opositora, UNO), an alliance that ranged from conservatives and liberals to communists. Contrary to what most observers expected, Chamorro shocked Ortega and won the election. In Ortega's concession speech the following day he vowed to keep "ruling from below" a reference to the power that the FSLN still wielded in various sectors.
Ortega ran for election again, in October 1996 and November 2001, but lost on both occasions to
Arnoldo Alemán and
Enrique Bolaños, respectively. In these elections, a key issue was the allegation of corruption. In Ortega’s last days as president, through a series of legislative acts known as “The
Piñata”, estates that had been seized by the Sandinista government (some valued at millions and even billions US$) became the private property of various FSLN officials, including Ortega himself.
Ortega's policies became more moderate during his time in opposition, and he gradually reduced much of his former
Marxist rhetoric in favor of an agenda of more moderate
democratic socialism. His
Roman Catholic faith has become more intense in recent years as well, leading Ortega to embrace a variety of
socially conservative policies; in
2006 the FSLN endorsed a strict law banning all
abortions in Nicaragua.
In 1998, Daniel Ortega's stepdaughter Zoilamérica Narváez released a 48-page report describing her allegations that Ortega had systematically sexually abused her for 9 years beginning when she was 11.
[9]
The case could not proceed in Nicaraguan courts because Ortega had immunity from prosecution as a member of parliament, and the five-year statute of limitations for sexual abuse and rape charges was judged to have been exceeded.
Narváez's complaint was heard by the
Inter American Human Rights Commission on
March 4,
2002.
[10]
In 2006,
UN Watch executive director Hillel Neuer expressed concern that election of Ortega, described as having "highly substantiated" charges of sexual abuse raised against him, to the Presidency of Nicaragua, could undermine worldwide NGO efforts against child abuse and sexual violence.
[11]
Current activities
FSLN-PLC Alliance in the National Assembly
Ortega was instrumental in creating the controversial strategic pact between the FSLN and the
Constitutional Liberal Party (Partido Liberal Constitucionalista, PLC).
The controversial alliance of Nicaragua's two major parties aimed at distributing the powers between the PLC and FSLN, preventing other parties from rising. ''"El Pacto,"'' as it is known in Nicaragua, is said to have personally benefited former presidents Ortega and
Alemán greatly, while constraining then president
Enrique Bolaños. One of the key accords of the pact was to lower the percentage necessary to win a presidential election in a first round from 45% to 35%, a change in electoral law that would become decisive in the 2006 elections.
2006 Presidential Election
The
2006 Nicaraguan presidential election was held on
November 5 2006. FSLN presidential candidate Ortega was the victor in the November elections, having attained 37.99% of the votes cast. The Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance (ALN) gained 28.30%, the Liberal Constitutional Party (PLC) won 27.11%, the Movement for Sandinista renewal (MRS) 6.29% and the Alternative for Change (AC) 0.29%. The FSLN were the party out in force to celebrate a victory the night after the election took place on
November 6. Following his election, Ortega was congratulated by
Hugo Chávez, the president of Venezuela, and
Fidel Castro, the president of Cuba.
[12].
Herty Lewites – who was also running for president prior to his death in July 2006 – suggested that Ortega's pact with Alemán had given Ortega ''de facto'' control of the bodies responsible for administering the election, and thus that Ortega would most likely have been the winner. Under the old law, Ortega would have gone to a second round against
Eduardo Montealegre (he would have needed 45% instead of 35%.) International observers, including the
Carter Center, judged the election to be free and fair. Ortega was congratulated by telephone by Venezuela's Hugo Chávez who chanted "long live the Sandinista revolution!" The White House confirmed on
January 8,
2007 that U.S. President
Bush had also called Ortega to congratulate him on his election victory.
Ortega's second presidency
While supporting abortion rights during his presidency during the 1980s, Ortega
has since embraced the Catholic church's position of strong opposition
[1]. While non-emergency abortions have long been illegal in Nicaragua, recently even abortions "in the case where the pregnancy endangers the mother’s life" have been made illegal in the days before the election, with a 6 years prison term in such cases too -- a move supported by Ortega
[2].
In his first week as President of Nicaragua Ortega met with
Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The two heads of state toured shantytowns in
Managua. Ortega told the press that the "revolutions of Iran and Nicaragua are almost twin revolutions...since both revolutions are about justice, liberty, self-determination, and the struggle against imperialism."
[13]
As of
June 2007, a CID-Gallup
survey published in the Managua daily ''
La Prensa'' found that Ortega's approval level had dropped significantly, 26% of Nicaraguans having a positive image of his handling of the job, 36% a negative impression, and the remaining a neutral impression. The poll also indicated that 54% were still optimistic about Ortega and the government, in particular the health and education policies. Additionally, 57% of Nicaraguans believe the country is on the "wrong track", and only 31% believe that the country is on the "right track". CID-Gallup surveyed 1,258 people throughout the country and had a margin of error of more or less 2.5%.
[14]
References
1. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6117704.stm "Ortega wins Nicaraguan election" (BBC)]
2. Daniel Ortega Saavedra, candidato presidencial del FSLN
3. Hispanic Heritage in the Americas: Ortega, Daniel
4. Cardenal Obando caso a Daniel Ortega y poetisa Rosario Murillo
5. Thomas Walker, ''Nicaragua: Living in the Shadow of the Eagle'', 4th Ed. (Westview Press, 2003)
6. 'The Sandinistas won't submit to free elections' Article from "Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting"
]. November 1987
7. Ronald Reagan. Remarks Following Discussions With President Jose Napoleon Duarte of El Salvador. May 16, 1985
8. Aid to the Nicaraguan Democratic Resistance
9. The sins of Nicaragua's fathers Isabel Hilton
10. Zoilamerica Narvaez presents her case at the Inter-American
11. Nicaraguan Vote Could Send Wrong Message on Child Abuse
12. BBC Article ''Second chance for Nicaragua's Ortega''
13. Nicaragua e Iran, "Unión Invencible" ''Hauser, Karim'' BBC Mundo, June 2007
14. "Dramática caída de Ortega" June 20, 2007 ''La Prensa''
External links
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Office of the President
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La Voz del Sandinismo - News of the FSLN, Nicaragua and the World
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CNN Cold War: Interview with Daniel Ortega
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''The Christian Science Monitor'', September 15, 2005, profile of Daniel Ortega
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An old-school Yankee-basher’s new tune is popular in Nicaragua
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El Nuevo Diario
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Time magazine
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MSNBC, "Leftward Tilt: Political Shift in Latin America"