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BackNicaraguan Indigenous Leader Brooklyn Rivera Dies in State Custody
Nicaraguan Indigenous Leader Brooklyn Rivera Dies in State Custody
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BBC World5/31/2026Politics3 min read

Nicaraguan Indigenous Leader Brooklyn Rivera Dies in State Custody

Quick Look

  • Indigenous leader Brooklyn Rivera, founder of Yatama, has died in Nicaraguan state custody after nearly three years of detention.
  • The government cited COVID-19 and health deterioration, but critics allege political oppression and mistreatment.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Brooklyn Rivera, a prominent indigenous leader and founder of Yatama, died in Nicaraguan state custody. He had been detained for nearly three years and was a critic of President Daniel Ortega's government, having opposed it in the 1980s.

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A leading Nicaraguan indigenous leader has died after being detained by the ruling authoritarian regime for nearly three years.

Brooklyn Rivera, who founded the central American nation's indigenous movement Yatama, died due to "physical and neurological deterioration" linked to a Covid-19 infection, the Nicaraguan Ministry of Health stated on Sunday.

The government, headed by President Daniel Ortega, took 15 hours to confirm the death and are refusing to release the 73-year-old's body to his family, opposition media report.

The Nicaraguan government is routinely accused of political oppression, and Rivera is one of a growing number of dissidents to die in custody.

Rivera had been arbitrarily detained when he returned to his home in Nicaragua in September 2023.

He had long fought for indigenous autonomy in Nicaragua, and had opposed Ortega's Sandinista revolutionary government in the 1980s as part of an indigenous militia that fought alongside the Contras.

Rivera's detainment was only recognised by the regime more than a year after it began, following pressure from other nations.

Little was heard of his condition until Wednesday, when the government acknowledged he had been in hospital in the capital, Managua, since early March.

It said he had been suffering from a range of conditions including "cerebral edema associated with severe neurological injury", a respiratory infection and renal failure.

Nicaragua's Ministry of Health released an image of an emaciated Rivera lying in a hospital bed being ventilated via a tube through his neck.

The US State Department said Rivera had been "unjustly imprisoned", and the Nicaraguan Ministry of Health's statement was "an attempt to conceal its central role in the cruel treatment and Rivera's current conditions".

Meanwhile, César Marín, Amnesty International spokesperson for the region, said: "Brooklyn Rivera must be released immediately and unconditionally.

"His critical health condition while in the custody of the Nicaraguan state confirms the extreme risk to which he has been exposed."

The Nicaraguan Ministry of Health said on Sunday that Rivera had been surrounded by several members of his family when he died.

It had earlier said he could not be transferred elsewhere due to his degenerating condition.

Bianca Jagger, a Nicaraguan human rights activist and former wife of Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger, told the BBC World Service's Newshour programme that she held the Ortega regime responsible for Rivera's death.

"We're talking about a dictatorial regime," she said. "There have been many other political prisoners who have died while in the custody of the regime."

The Indigenous Youth Association of Moskitia - the ancestral region Rivera hailed from - expressed its "profound indignation at the inhuman, cruel and unjust treatment he endured in his final years".

"Keeping an elderly person deprived of their liberty for years, without sufficient guarantees of due process, and in conditions that deteriorate their physical and emotional health, is a grave concern for any society that aspires to respect human rights," it said.

"His passing occurs in circumstances that should never have happened and that will continue to generate questions, pain, and legitimate demands for truth, justice and reparations."

The Argentina-based Inter-American Legal Assistance Center for Human Rights, which supports victims of repression in Nicaragua, strongly condemned Rivera's death and said those responsible "must be held criminally accountable".

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • International condemnation and calls for sanctions against the Nicaraguan government will intensify.

    Very likely · Within days

  • Further investigations into the circumstances of Rivera's death and the conditions of other political prisoners will be launched by human rights organizations.

    Likely · Within weeks

  • The Nicaraguan government will likely maintain its stance and deny responsibility for Rivera's death.

    Likely · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • What specific conditions led to Rivera's rapid health deterioration?
  • Will the Nicaraguan government release Rivera's body to his family?
  • What legal or diplomatic actions will be taken by international bodies or governments?
  • What is the current status of other political prisoners in Nicaragua?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC World.

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