Sandinista

Sandinista
/san'deuh nee"steuh/; Sp. /sahn'dee nees"tah/, n., pl. Sandinistas /-nee"steuhz/; Sp. /-nees"tahs/.
a member of the Nicaraguan revolutionary movement that took control of Nicaragua in 1979.
[1925-30, in sense "supporter of Sandino"; < AmerSp; see SANDINO, -IST]

* * *

Any member of Nicaragua's Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).

Named for César Augusto Sandino, a hero of Nicaraguan resistance to U.S. occupation (1927–33), the group was founded in 1962 to oppose the Somoza family's dictatorship. They organized support among students, workers, and peasants. From bases in Honduras and Costa Rica, they attacked the Nicaraguan National Guard. They split into factions in the mid-1970s but reunited during the revolution of 1978–79 that finally succeeded in overthrowing Pres. Anastasio Somoza. A junta headed by Daniel Ortega led the Sandinista government (1979–90), which implemented literacy and community health programs. In an effort to topple the government, the U.S. imposed a trade embargo, pressured international lending institutions to withhold aid, and trained and supported the contras. The FSLN lost support over time and was voted out of power in 1990. See also Violeta Chamorro.

* * *

▪ political and military organization, Nicaragua
member of  Sandinista National Liberation Front , Spanish  Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (FSLN) 

      one of a Nicaraguan group that overthrew President Anastasio Somoza Debayle (Somoza Debayle, Anastasio) in 1979, ending 46 years of dictatorship by the Somoza family. The Sandinistas governed Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990. Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega was reelected as president in 2006.

      Named for César Augusto Sandino (Sandino, César Augusto), a hero of Nicaraguan resistance to U.S. military occupation (1927–33), the FSLN was founded in 1962 by Carlos Fonseca Amador, Silvio Mayorga, and Tomás Borge Martínez as a revolutionary group committed to socialism and to the overthrow of the Somoza family. Over the next 10 years the FSLN organized political support among students, workers, and peasants. By the mid-1970s its attacks on the Nicaraguan National Guard from sanctuaries in Honduras and Costa Rica were serious enough that Somoza unleashed bloody reprisals against the Sandinistas. Fonseca and Mayorga were killed, and the FSLN split into three tendencias, or factions, that differed over whether the group should organize revolutionary cells only in the cities, continue to gradually accumulate support throughout the country, or coalesce with other political groups in the growing rebellion. The Nicaraguan revolution of 1978–79 reunited the Sandinistas under the third tendencia, headed by Daniel and Humberto Ortega Saavedra, and the FSLN, now numbering about 5,000 fighters, defeated the National Guard and overthrew Somoza in July 1979.

      A nine-member National Directorate, composed of three comandantes from each faction, was then set up to lead the FSLN and set policy for a governing junta that was headed by Daniel Ortega (Ortega, Daniel). Once in power in Nicaragua, the FSLN organized itself into local and regional committees and built up support through mass organizations of workers, young people, and other groups. To fight off the attacks of the counterrevolutionary forces known as the contras, who were based in Honduras and were in part armed and financed by the United States, Humberto Ortega created the 50,000-strong Sandinista Popular Army, and Tomás Borge organized a secret-police force to guard against espionage and dissent. The resignations of various non-Marxist members of the Sandinista leadership, chiefly over issues of political rights, pushed the party and Nicaragua progressively to the left, and both became dependent on the support of the Soviet Union and Cuba.

      The Sandinista government confiscated the Somoza family's vast landholdings and nationalized the country's major industries, but the central planning typical of Soviet-style socialist economies was never adopted, and small and medium-sized private farms and businesses were tolerated. Having committed itself to political pluralism, the FSLN grudgingly tolerated moderate opposition groups and agreed to elections only after considerable pressure at home and abroad. In 1984 the FSLN won more than 60 of 96 seats in a new National Assembly and sent Daniel Ortega to the presidency in an election that was widely criticized for its lack of safeguards for opposition parties. In 1990, however, the Nicaraguan populace, weary of war and economic depression, voted for the 14 parties of the National Opposition Union, which formed a government while the Sandinistas relinquished power.

      Though reduced to an opposition party, the FSLN retained a considerable power base in the country's army and police forces. It also performed strongly in national elections; in 1996 the Sandinistas won 37 percent of the vote in parliamentary elections, and in 2001 the party captured 42 percent of the vote and won 43 seats in the 90-seat National Assembly. The FSLN regained power after its leader, Ortega, was reelected to the presidency in 2006. The party also won a plurality of seats in the legislature.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Sandinista — Sandinista!  Pour le parti politique, voir Front sandiniste de libération nationale. Sandinista! Album par The Clash Sortie 12 décembre 1980 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Sandinista! — Studioalbum von The Clash Veröffentlichung 12. Dezember 1980 Label CBS (Europa) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sandinista! — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Sandinista! Álbum de The Clash Publicación 12 de diciembre de 1980 Grabación Junio Julio de …   Wikipedia Español

  • Sandinista! — Студийный а …   Википедия

  • Sandinista — steht für: Sandinistas, Anhänger und Mitglieder der Sandinistischen Nationalen Befreiungsfront Sandinista!, ein Album der Punk Band The Clash Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung zur Unterscheidung mehrerer mit demselbe …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sandinista — member of a Nicaraguan revolutionary group, 1928, from Sp., from name of Augusto César Sandino (1893 1934), Nicaraguan nationalist leader; the modern organization of this name was founded in 1963. Related: Sandanistas …   Etymology dictionary

  • sandinista — 1. adj. Perteneciente o relativo al sandinismo. 2. Partidario del sandinismo. U. t. c. s.) …   Diccionario de la lengua española

  • Sandinista — [san΄də nēs′tə] n. a member of the party that overthrew the government and took power in Nicaragua from 1979 until 1990 …   English World dictionary

  • Sandinista! — This article is about the album by The Clash. For information about the political organisation, see Sandinista National Liberation Front. Sandinista! Studio album by …   Wikipedia

  • Sandinista! — Pour le parti politique, voir Front sandiniste de libération nationale. Sandinista! Album par The Clash Sortie 12 décembre 1980 Enreg …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”