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Dictatorship confiscates wrong house, thinking it belonged to Ernesto Medina

Said property belonged to Medina’s mother, who later inherited it to her children and they sold it to third parties in León, who were now left homeless.

Ernesto Medina, denationalized and exiled by the Sandinista dictatorship. File/NI.

The owners of a house in León were surprised when it was suddenly seized with everything and its furniture, by police agents at the service of the Ortega dictatorship in Nicaragua, because apparently they intend to confiscate it thinking that it is the property of Dr. Ernesto Medina Sandino, who he was exiled and denationalized by the Nicaraguan State.

Medina, when consulted by Radio Darío de León, limited himself to saying that this property has never belonged to him, but rather it was his mother who inherited it in succession to his brothers and then it was sold to third parties, who are the ones who they were currently occupying it.

Ortega-Murillo dictatorship continues with arbitrary arrests

“I cannot pronounce myself for something that is not mine, it will be its current owners who will have to provide statements if they deem it appropriate,” said the professor. “I only have to say that it is another arbitrariness and abuse of the Ortega dictatorship,” he added.

The former adviser to the Civic Alliance was part of the 94 citizens who were stripped of their nationality in mid-February of this year, for being critical of the Sandinista dictatorship.

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