Indigenous Leader Dies in Nicaragua After Being Detained Nearly 3 Years

Human rights groups decry treatment of Brooklyn Rivera
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jun 1, 2026 3:00 AM CDT
Indigenous Leader Dies in Nicaragua After Nearly 3 Years of Detention
Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega speaks to supporters as his wife and Vice President Rosario Murillo applauds, in Managua, Nicaragua, Aug. 29, 2018.   (AP Photo/Alfredo Zuniga, File)

Brooklyn Rivera, a renowned Indigenous leader from Nicaragua who spent years fighting for the rights of his community and was imprisoned by the government in September 2023, has died, the AP reports. The Nicaraguan government issued a statement Sunday saying that Rivera died from a bacterial infection after his health had declined following a case of COVID-19, which led to his physical and neurological deterioration. Human rights activists and groups worldwide denounced his death and a previous statement by the government in which they referred to Rivera as "Brother" and said they were praying for him.

"They took him alive, and after refusing to tell his family, his lawyer, the world anything about his fate, then they call him brother," said Reed Brody, an American human rights lawyer and member of a group of UN experts on Nicaragua. "Unconscionable cynicism on the part of the government to make it seem like they were trying to help him." The US had called for his release on Friday after the Nicaraguan government published photos of him in the hospital in critical condition. The Argentina-based Inter-American Center for Legal Assistance in Human Rights also denounced Rivera's death. Those responsible for the death of the Indigenous lawmaker "should be held criminally accountable," it wrote on X.

Rivera led the Miskito people, who live along Nicaragua's northeast coast and have long fought to retain their lands. For decades, he fought the ruling Sandinista government and helped establish the area along the northeast coast as an autonomous region. It is rich in gold, silver and other resources, and it is considered a key area for the administration of co-Presidents Daniel Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo to attract foreign investment. Rivera's fight for Nicaragua's Indigenous people began in the 1960s. After opposing Ortega's Sandinista's government in the late 1970s, he temporarily went into exile in nearby Costa Rica in 1980. He later returned to Nicaragua, where he survived an attack by Sandinista forces, forcing him once again to seek safety elsewhere, this time, in Colombia.

In the late 1980s, he founded the group known as Yatama, the Organization of the Peoples of Mother Earth. It played a key role in securing limited autonomy for Indigenous people following peace negotiations with the Sandinistas. In April 2023, Rivera traveled to Geneva to participate in a UN forum on Indigenous people, where he spoke out against the Nicaraguan government. Shortly afterward, Ortega and Murillo banned him from returning to the country, but he slipped in anyway and lived in hiding until September 2023, when he was arrested and accused of terrorism. "Nobody heard from him since then," Brody said.

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