President Ortega
highlights Nicaragua’s advances and challenges
MANAGUA.— Nicaraguan President
Daniel Ortega, spoke of the advances and challenges
in his country, during a ceremony commemorating the
35th anniversary of the triumph of the Sandinista
Revolution, July 19, 1979.
President
Daniel Ortega, during the official ceremony
commemorating the 35th anniversary of the triumph of
the Sandinista Revolution.
In the capital’s Plaza de la Fe,
before a multitude of Nicaraguans and
representatives from various nations, Ortega
highlighted Nicaragua’s advances in areas such as
combating poverty, extreme poverty and malnutrition,
over the last seven years.
He also emphasized advances made in
healthcare; education; the construction of roads and
high-ways; productive policies; the rights of young
people; popular participation; and above all
solidarity. Nonetheless, he also commented on the
many challenges facing the country, stating that are
some areas in which illiteracy persists, principally
in the mountains, and highlighting the need to bring
literacy to the communities in these regions.
At another point during his speech,
referring to the Sandinista Revolution, he recalled
that the Nicaragua people overthrew the United
States’ representative in country, dictator
Anastasio Somoza.

Thousands of
Nicaraguans celebrated the triumph of the Sandanista
Revolution.
The people organized themselves in
different combat fronts, in the insurrection in the
cities, raising the black and red flag to defend and
save the homeland and break the chains of U.S.
imperialism, he stated.
Ramiro Valdés, a Cuban vice
president of the Councils of State and Ministers,
who led a delegation to the celebrations, described
the July 19 triumph as the beginning of a long road
of transformations in Nicaragua. He emphasized the
country’s economic growth and creation of more
employment after the Sandinista National Liberation
Front (FSLN) returned to power in 2007, as well as
the development of social programs and achievements
in security and reduction of poverty.
Also present was Venezuelan
President Nicolás Maduro, who extended his nation’s
support to the construction of an inter-oceanic
canal in Nicaragua.
Ramiro
Valdés, a Cuban vice president of the Councils of
State and Ministers, emphasized the social and
economic transformations in Nicaragua after the
triumph of the revolution on July 19, 1979. Photo:
César Pérez.
Maduro stated that Nicaragua has the
support of Venezuela and Alba. Emphasizing the need
to think big, think about great infrastructure
projects, a new economy, how to build powerful,
developed and diversified economies.
Maduro congratulated Ortega for "having
assumed this historic project of constructing an
inter-oceanic canal here in Nicaraguan territory,
with clarity and integrity."
In 1979, the dictatorial government
of Anastasio Somoza Debayle, the last member of the
Somoza Debayle family to hold the position, was
defeated by an insurrectional movement led by the
FSLN.
In attendance at the commemoration
ceremony, led by Ortega, were the Presidents of
Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro; El Salvador, Salvador
Sánchez Cerén; and Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernández.
As well as Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú,
and President of the Ecuadoran Parliament, Gabriela
Rivadeneira, among other dignitaries. (PL)