Protests against Daniel Ortega

Protests against Daniel Ortega
Part of Protests against democratic backsliding
Top to bottom:
  • Protesters gathered on 10 December 2014 denouncing the Nicaraguan Canal. Campesinos gathered in El Tule on 23 December 2014. A woman holding a Nicaraguan national flag near a burning barricade on 20 April 2018.
Date24 December 2014 – 31 December 2021
(7 years and 1 week)
Location
Caused byDemocratic deficit, political repression, social security, environmental protection, Nicaragua Canal proposal
Goals
Resulted in
  • Reduced pension for small contributors
  • Cancellation of social reforms
  • Nicaragua Canal construction has not started
Parties
Lead figures
Number
Hundreds of thousands
Casualties
Deaths2 (2014) · 325–568 (2018)
Injuries20+ (2014) · 433 (2018)
Arrested47 (2014)  · 200+ (2018)

Protests against President of Nicaragua Daniel Ortega began in 2014, when the construction of the Nicaragua Canal was about to begin, and several hundred protesters blocked roads and clashed with police during the groundbreaking of the canal. Tens of thousands of Nicaraguans began to protest against President Ortega for what they believe to be a corrupt electoral system.

The protests were renewed in April 2018 following the Ortega administration's decree of the Nicaraguan Social Security Institute's social security reform increasing taxes and decreasing benefits. Police and the paramilitary groups attacked and killed unarmed protesters, which made people to stand-up. After five days of deadly unrest, Ortega announced the cancellation of the reforms. Since then, Ortega faced the largest protests in his government's history, with the protest movement spreading to denounce Ortega in general and demanding his resignation. Related protests continue to the present day.