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A blog about Latin America,
from a writer in Nicaragua

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Two Worlds

A blog about Latin America,
from a writer in Nicaragua

  • Nicaragua | Masaya project updates

    Solar-powered irrigation system starts to pump water

    John Perry March 8, 2015July 18, 2025

    The ‘Agrosolar’ project, funded by the British embassy, has begun to pump water to irrigate crops right at the start of Nicaragua’s dry season. El Timal is in the almost forgotten area between Nicaragua’s two large lakes, only about 20km from the international airport but with practically no transport connections to the nearest town. Into…

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  • Nicaragua

    Kill the messenger

    John Perry March 6, 2015July 18, 2025

    In January 1983, police in Los Angeles arrested frogmen bringing 400 pounds of cocaine ashore from a Colombian freighter. But they missed their main target, the drug importer Norwin Meneses, who may have been tipped off by officials. In August 1986, a US Customs informant, Joseph Kelso, told his handlers that Drug Enforcement Administration officials…

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  • Latin America | Book reviews

    Empire’s Crossroads: A history of the Caribbean from Columbus to the present day

    John Perry December 30, 2014December 31, 2015

    There are many histories of the Americas that begin with Columbus’s landing in what were to become known as the West Indies, but this is perhaps one of the few accessible accounts which focus on the Caribbean itself, and which follow through right to the present day. Carrie Gibson’s thesis is that the Caribbean was…

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  • Latin America | Book reviews

    The Saint of Santa Fe by Silvio Sirias

    John Perry December 30, 2014

    Silvio Sirias comes from a Nicaraguan family who brought him up initially in the United States, but clearly bequeathed him a strong interest in finding out about the story of the region from which the family came. His latest novel is based in Panama, where he now lives, and I’ve yet to read his first,…

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  • Latin America

    Five out of five

    John Perry December 29, 2014

    On the morning of 17 December, schoolchildren in Coralito assembled under the Cuban flag to sing the anthem before starting lessons. Early sunshine picked out five palm trees on the roadside opposite the school. They were planted in support of the ‘Cuban Five’, agents sent to Miami to disrupt anti-Castro plots by Cuban exiles in…

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  • Nicaragua | Masaya project updates

    He was no ‘Sandalista’

    John Perry December 11, 2014July 18, 2025

    What happened to the thousands who came to Nicaragua from North America and Europe in the 1980s, inspired by the Sandinista revolution? A very few stayed, of course, and a number went back to their home countries and began serious solidarity work. Others, soon branded Sandalistas, enjoyed their exotic experience but swiftly moved on to…

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  • Nicaragua | Energy and the environment

    Remembering Felicita Zeledón: the woman who told the world about the tragedy at Posoltega

    John Perry November 30, 2014July 18, 2025

    The untimely death of Felicita Zeledón, a member of the National Assembly, recalls the tragedy that hit the rural area of Posoltega on the morning of 30 October 1998. Zeledón, then mayor of the small town on the Leon-Chinandega highway, became the central figure in dealing with the biggest humanitarian crisis in Nicaragua since the…

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  • Latin America

    Freed member of the ‘Cuban Five’ visits Masaya

    John Perry November 24, 2014

    Fernando González, the second of the Cuban Five to be released from prison, has been in Masaya as part of the campaign on behalf of the other three, who have been incarcerated since 1998. On Saturday afternoon a small room packed with about 300 people saw him receive the freedom of the city from the…

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  • Nicaragua

    Independence Day

    John Perry September 15, 2014July 18, 2025

    Today, September 15, marks 193 years since the end of Spanish colonial rule in Central America. Traditionally celebrated as Independence Day across the five countries that share it, Central America’s autonomy has in reality been in question for much of the time since 1821. To begin with, the five countries remained attached to distant Mexico,…

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  • Latin America | Energy and the environment

    When mining firms sue

    John Perry September 15, 2014September 15, 2014

    Last week a fracking company was refused permission to drill in the South Downs National Park. Celtique Energie is considering an appeal to Eric Pickles to overrule the decision. He might be reluctant to cause a furore in West Sussex, but would he feel the same if aggrieved companies could sue the government for lost…

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Housing Guardian contributor
John PerryJohn Perry lives in Masaya, Nicaragua where he writes about Latin America for the Grayzone, Covert Action, FAIR, London Review of Books, Morning Star and elsewhere, and also works on UK housing and migration issues.

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