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Jetser lives in Nicaragua with his mother. He is 10 year(s) old. Jetser speaks Spanish. When you decide to sponsor Jetser you decide to start a life-changing journey with him.
Nicaragua spiralled into crisis in 2018, with political protest erupting into widespread violence. Thousands fled the country, most heading south into Costa Rica, and life is increasingly difficult. I read more...n the grip of the COVID-19 pandemic, information has been slow to emerge and the nation’s President, Daniel Ortega has publicly dismissed the risks. In April 2018, the Ortega government announced reforms to Nicaragua’s pension system. The announcement was greeted by initial protests that were crushed by pro-government groups, but the heavy-handed response triggered widespread outrage, mass protests across the country, and ever more violence. More than 300 people were killed and thousands injured. In the years since his crackdown on the protests, President Ortega and his wife, Rosario Murillo, who is the nation’s vice-president, have seized even more power, taking full control over all branches of government. After a long history of colonisation and military rule, Nicaragua has struggled to provide its citizens with basic services. Most of its wealth is held by a small group of wealthy families. The majority of Nicaraguans subsist on very low wages and children have been the worst affected. In the early part of this decade, Nicaragua had made some economic progress: its economy was growing and it had largely avoided the cartel and gang-related crime racking its northern neighbours, El Salvador and Honduras. But progress has stalled under the COVID-19 pandemic. As in several other Central and South American nations, medical experts have questioned the official data as hospitals have struggled to keep up with a growing number of cases. Many children face a new threat of hunger, and the ever-present risks of gang life and child labour trap thousands. Local churches continue to reach out to children living in poverty, helping them to gain access to education, nutrition and the love of Jesus expressed through the local church.
I live in a Town area where the terrain is Hilly. The closest major city to where I live is called Ocotal. There are 8000 people who live here, and most have jobs like Animal Herding, Day Labor, Domes read more...tic Services, Factory Work, Fishing, Petty/Market Trading, Plantation Work, Street Vending, Subsistence Farming. The climate here is Dry. Our coldest month is Dec and the warmest is Apr.