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HISTORY
Nicaragua
takes its name from Nicarao, chief of the indigenous tribe
that lived around present-day Lake Nicaragua during the late
1400s and early 1500s. In 1524, Hernandez de Cordoba founded
the first Spanish permanent settlements in the region, including
two of Nicaragua's principal towns: Granada on Lake Nicaragua,
and Leon east of Lake Managua. Nicaragua gained independence
from Spain in 1821, briefly becoming a part of the Mexican
Empire and then a member of a federation of independent Central
American provinces. In 1838, Nicaragua became an independent
republic.
Much of
Nicaragua's politics since independence have been characterized
by the rivalry between the Liberal elite of Leon and the Conservative
elite of Granada, which often led to civil war. Initially
invited by the Liberals in 1855 to join their struggle against
the Conservatives, an American named William Walker and his
"filibusters" seized the presidency in 1856. The
Liberals and Conservatives united to drive him out of office
in 1857. Three decades of Conservative rule followed.
Taking advantage of divisions within the Conservative ranks,
Jose Santos Zelaya led a Liberal revolt that brought him to
power in 1893. Zelaya ended a longstanding dispute with Britain
over the Atlantic Coast in 1894, and reincorporated that region
into Nicaragua.
By 1909, differences
had developed over an isthmian canal and concessions to Americans
in Nicaragua; there also was concern about what was perceived
as Nicaragua's destabilizing influence in the region. In 1909
the United States provided political support to Conservative-led
forces rebelling against President Zelaya and intervened militarily
to protect American lives and property. Zelaya resigned later
that year. With the exception of a 9-month period in 1925-26,
the United States maintained troops in Nicaragua from 1912
until 1933. From 1927 until 1933, U.S. Marines stationed in
Nicaragua engaged in a running battle with rebel forces led
by renegade Liberal Gen. Augusto Sandino, who rejected a 1927
negotiated agreement brokered by the United States to end
the latest round of fighting between Liberals and Conservatives.
After
the departure of U.S. troops, National Guard Cmdr. Anastasio
Somoza Garcia outmaneuvered his political opponents--including
Sandino, who was assassinated by National Guard officers--and
took over the presidency in 1936. Somoza, and two sons who
succeeded him, maintained close ties with the United States.
The Somoza dynasty ended in 1979 with a massive uprising led
by the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN), which
had conducted a lowscale guerrilla war against the Somoza
regime since the early 1960s.
The FSLN
established an authoritarian dictatorship soon after taking
power. U.S.-Nicaraguan relations deteriorated rapidly as the
regime nationalized many private industries, confiscated private
property, supported Central American guerrilla movements,
and maintained links to international terrorists. The United
States suspended aid to Nicaragua in 1981. The Reagan administration
provided assistance to the Nicaraguan resistance and in 1985
imposed an embargo on U.S.-Nicaraguan trade.
In response
to both domestic and international pressure, the Sandinista
regime entered into negotiations with the Nicaraguan resistance
and agreed to nationwide elections in February 1990. In these
elections, which were proclaimed free and fair by international
observers, Nicaraguan voters elected as their President the
candidate of the National Opposition Union, Violeta Barrios
de Chamorro.
During
President Chamorro's nearly 7 years in office, her government
achieved major progress toward consolidating democratic institutions,
advancing national reconciliation, stabilizing the economy,
privatizing state-owned enterprises, and reducing human rights
violations. In February 1995, Sandinista Popular Army Cmdr.
Gen. Humberto Ortega was replaced in accordance with a new
military code enacted in 1994 by Gen. Joaquin Cuadra, who
espoused a policy of greater professionalism in the renamed
Army of Nicaragua. A new police organization law, passed by
the National Assembly and signed into law in August 1996,
further codified both civilian control of the police and the
professionalization of that law enforcement agency. Despite
a number of irregularities--which were due largely to logistical
difficulties and a baroquely complicated electoral law--the
October 20, 1996 presidential, legislative, and mayoral elections were
judged free and fair by international observers and by the
groundbreaking national electoral observer group Etica y Transparencia
(Ethics and Transparency). This time Nicaraguans elected former
Managua Mayor Arnoldo Aleman, leader of the center-right Liberal
Alliance. The first transfer of power in recent Nicaraguan
history from one democratically elected president to another
took place on January 10, 1997, when the Aleman government
was inaugurated.
In November
2000, Nicaragua held municipal elections--the country's third
free and fair election since 1990. President Aleman's Liberal
Constitutionalist Party (PLC) won a majority of the overall
mayoral races, but the FSLN fared considerably better in larger
urban areas, winning a significant number of departmental
capitals, including Managua.
Presidential
and legislative elections were held in November 2001. Enrique
Bolaños of the Liberal Constitutionalist Party
was elected to the Nicaraguan presidency on November 4, 2001,
defeating FSLN candidate Daniel Ortega by 14 percentage
points. The elections, characterized by international observers
as free, fair and peaceful, reflected the maturing of Nicaragua's
democratic institutions. During his campaign, President-elect
Bolaños promised to reinvigorate the economy, create
jobs, fight corruption, and support the war against terrorism.
Bolaños was inaugurated on January 10, 2002.
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