Nicaragua to Release Detainees After U.S. Pressure
Nicaragua’s Interior Ministry said Saturday, Jan. 11, 2026, that “dozens” of people held in the National Penitentiary System are being released to their families, a move human-rights advocates and the U.S. State Department see as a response to growing U.S. pressure on President Daniel Ortega’s regime after Washington ousted Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro a week earlier. The U.S. Embassy had just criticized Managua for keeping more than 60 people "unjustly detained or disappeared," including pastors, religious workers, the sick and the elderly, even as it praised Venezuela’s recent release of political prisoners. Rights groups note that since violently crushing 2018 protests, Nicaragua has jailed and often exiled opponents, stripped hundreds of citizenships, shuttered over 5,000 mostly religious organizations and forced thousands to flee, and they warn that freed detainees will likely face continued police surveillance and harassment. Danny Ramírez-Ayérdiz of Nicaraguan group CADILH said he welcomed the releases but argued they reflect the regime’s fear that the U.S. could "completely dismantle it," underscoring how Washington’s Maduro operation is reverberating through other authoritarian governments in the region. The State Department meanwhile blasted Ortega’s "illegitimate lifelong dynasty" on X, insisting that constitutional rewrites and repression will not erase Nicaraguans’ demands to live free from tyranny.
📌 Key Facts
- On Jan. 11, 2026, Nicaragua’s Interior Ministry announced that 'dozens' of detainees in the National Penitentiary System are being released to return home.
- The U.S. Embassy in Nicaragua said more than 60 people remain 'unjustly detained or disappeared,' including religious workers, the sick and the elderly, and contrasted Managua’s actions with Venezuela’s recent release of political prisoners.
- Human-rights groups say the move comes after intensified U.S. pressure following the U.S. raid that ousted Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, with CADILH’s Danny Ramírez-Ayérdiz warning that freed prisoners and their families will still be monitored and harassed by Nicaraguan police.
📊 Relevant Data
Over 800,000 Nicaraguans, representing 11.6% of the country's total population, have emigrated since April 2018, with more than 475,000 migrating to the United States alone between 2019 and 2024, driven by political repression and economic instability.
More Than 800,000 Nicaraguans Left the Country Since 2018 — Havana Times
The 2018 protests in Nicaragua were initially triggered by government-proposed social security reforms that increased taxes and reduced benefits, which evolved into widespread demands for democratic reforms and an end to corruption, leading to a violent crackdown that resulted in over 300 deaths.
A Road to Dialogue After Nicaragua's Crushed Uprising — International Crisis Group
US sanctions on Nicaragua have exacerbated economic hardships, leading to increased informal employment, economic deprivation, and heightened migration outflows, with the economy experiencing contractions and rising poverty rates.
The Consequences of Nicaragua's Radicalization and Options for US Foreign Policy — Inter-American Dialogue
As of October 29, 2025, Nicaragua holds 77 political prisoners, with nearly half (approximately 38) in forced disappearance and 22 being elderly adults over 60 years old.
Nicaragua has 77 political prisoners as of October 29, 2025 — Nica Perspectives
📰 Source Timeline (1)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time