July 19, Mujica and the OAS – La República CE



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On the 93rd day of the Nicaraguan people's civic and peaceful rebellion for freedom and democracy, the 39th anniversary of the Sandinista Armed Revolution is commemorated today, July 19th.

July 19 is a national holiday, according to it provides the Labor Code promulgated in October 1996, at the end of the democratic government of Ms. Violeta Barrios de Chamorro. However, for many Nicaraguans – not just old Somocistas, but also authentically democratic – this is not a festive date. For them, it is a sad day because, on July 19, 1979, democracy was not established, as promised, but a new dictatorship was established that was worse than the Somocista.

Now, because of the bloody repression against the people raging by the dictatorship of Ortega – who claims the second part of the Sandinista revolution – there are probably many more Nicaraguans who do not recognize this anniversary. as a national holiday.

Ortega y Murillo and their armed and civil supporters, they celebrate this anniversary of their revolution by winning great victories in the war they are waging against the disarmed people. But in reality there are great political and moral defeats that have suffered the Ortega regime, both in the country and internationally.

The world is horrified by the systematic slaughter of the Ortega regime against a people who demand only justice, freedom and democracy. In this context, it was a slap in the face of this ruthless dictatorship, which the OAS approved on the eve of July 19 an energetic resolution that condemns it and demands that it hold early elections to pave the way for democracy.

Moral defeat for Ortega and Murillo, the statement of the former Uruguayan president and revolutionary veteran, José (Pepe) Mujica. In an intervention in the Senate of Uruguay, in which a seat sits, former President Mujica said Tuesday: "I feel that something (the Sandinista revolution) that was a dream is diverted, falls into the Autocracy and understands that those who were yesterday the revolutionaries have lost the sense that in life there are times when you have to say that I am going ". Immediately after the Uruguayan senators had unanimously approved a statement proposed by the government party – which has remained but democratic – in which the Ortega regime is demanded "the immediate cessation of violence against the people" and the Urges to hold free and transparent elections

Every person, from Nicaragua and from any other country in the world, can value the Sandinista revolution as it wishes according to its political affiliations, its ideological convictions and its values ethical. But a dictatorship is the same as any other dictatorship, be it on the right like that of the Somozas, or on the left, as the Sandinists from 1979 to 1990, and say Ortega and Murillo, which is their current dictatorial regime .

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