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The Chamorros--Divided Family in a War-Torn Country
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14400 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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6 / 1988 |
2,180 Words |
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Clemens Michel Clemens Michel is a senior research fellow at the Council for
Inter-American Security. He previously worked as a Latin
America specialist for West Germany's Christian Democratic
Party and has interviewed members of the Chamorro family on
several occasions. |
Chamorro, one of Nicaragua's most prominent and influential family names, has become almost synonymous with the country's struggle against dictatorship and oppression. Yet the family itself is as torn as the country, with brothers and sisters on opposite sides of the political spectrum.
Since the 1930s, the family-owned newspaper La Prensa has been the voice of the Nicaraguan people and a symbol of their resistance to dictatorships on the Right and the Left.
The man who probably deserves most of the credit for the tireless fight against the brutal and corrupt Somoza regime is Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Cardenal, who became publisher of La Prensa after the death of his father in 1952.
By then, Pedro Joaquin had been active in the struggle against Somoza for many years. In the 1940s, he led a student group called "The Generation of 1944" and participated in anti-Somoza demonstrations. Later, Pedro Joaquin and his family went into exile in Costa Rica. He returned to Nicaragua in 1948 and undertook a number of unsuccessful attempts to overthrow the Somoza dictatorship.
Even after becoming the publisher of La Prensa, Pedro Joaquin did not limit his activities to the newspaper. Between 1954 and 1957, he spent more than 18 months in prison for various acts against the Somoza regime. He later went back to Costa Rica, where he worked for the newspaper Prensa Libre.
Mightier than the
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