It takes a peculiar form of moral cowardice to watch a man die slowly in a dictator’s dungeon for three years, say nothing while he rots, then issue a plaintive press release when the inevitable occurs. This is the sum of Britain’s contribution to the tragedy of Nicaragua, where indigenous leader Lottie Cunningham Wren has reportedly died after 1,095 days in the custody of Daniel Ortega’s regime. The Foreign Office has condemned the Ortega government. How noble. How dreadfully late.
Cunningham Wren was not some obscure figure. She was a lawyer and human rights defender, respected across Latin America for her defence of the Miskito and Rama peoples against land seizures and illegal mining. Her crime was to speak truth to power. For that, Ortega’s police snatched her in 2021, and she has been languishing in a Managua cell ever since, her health deteriorating steadily. The regime denied her adequate medical care, as they do to all political prisoners. Now she is dead, and the world offers regrets.
Let us set aside the grisly details of her final hours, which will no doubt emerge in due course. Let us instead ask the question that Britain’s mandarins prefer to evade: Why does this pattern repeat itself? From the Balkans to the Sahel, from the Caucasus to Central America, we see the same cycle. A strongman consolidates power. He cracks down on dissent. The international community issues statements, imposes toothless sanctions, and waits for the man to die of old age. And every time, we are surprised when the violence escalates.
Ortega is a classic specimen of the post-imperial caudillo. He took power in 1979, lost it in 1990, and clawed his way back in 2007 through a rigged election that the international community chose to accept as legitimate. Since then, he has methodically dismantled every check on his authority: the courts, the press, the opposition parties. Nicaragua now ranks alongside Venezuela and Cuba as a model of failed socialism, except with worse infrastructure. The human cost is staggering: over 300 political prisoners, mass emigration, and a GDP that has barely grown.
But the West’s response has been a masterclass in denouncing virtue signalling. The European Union has imposed sanctions on Ortega and his family. The United States has done likewise. Britain, a minor player in the region, occasionally offers its moral outrage. But none of this has altered the regime’s behaviour by one iota. Why? Because Ortega knows the sanctions are hollow. He can turn to Russia for investment, China for infrastructure loans, and the UAE for trade. The global South is full of autocrats who happily trade with a fellow traveller.
We must also confront an uncomfortable truth about our own historical hypocrisy. Britain spent centuries extracting wealth from Central America: from the Mosquito Coast protectorate to the railway concessions. We lectured the locals on democracy while our bankers profited from their dictators. Now we wring our hands when a strongman behaves exactly as strongmen do. The lesson is simple: if you want to prevent these tragedies, do not invest in the ordure of morally bankrupt regimes. But that would require a level of consistency our foreign policy has never possessed.
The death of Lottie Cunningham Wren is a stain on the conscience of every nation that looked the other way. She was 47 years old. She leaves behind a husband and two children. Her legacy will be the land rights she fought for and the regime that killed her. Britain can condemn Ortega all it likes, but until we are prepared to enforce real consequences, these statements are just so much ink on paper. The real question is whether we have the stomach for the fight. History suggests we do not.









