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The dictatorship of Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo removed Daysi Ivette Torres Bosques from her position as extraordinary and plenipotentiary ambassador of Nicaragua to Cuba, where she had only been in office for 50 days.
The removal was formalized through the Presidential Agreement No. 42-2026, published in La Gaceta, the Official Gazette of Nicaragua, which ordered "to nullify the appointment of Compañera Daysi Ivette Torres Bosques as the Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of the Republic of Nicaragua to the Government of the Republic of Cuba, contained in Presidential Agreement No. 21-2026 dated February 3, 2026," according to La Prensa.
Although the order was issued on Tuesday, March 24, it was not made public until yesterday. The regime did not provide official reasons for the dismissal.
Torres Bosques had been appointed on February 3rd and was just days away from completing two months in office, on the upcoming April 3rd.
Before arriving in Havana, she served as the ambassador of Nicaragua in Venezuela from March 2023 until January 28, 2026, when she was also removed from that position.
Just six days later, the regime moved her to Cuba. The Nicaraguan outlet Nicaragua Investiga headlined at the time: "Daysi Torres is sent from one chaos to another."
It is not an isolated case. Over the years, the Ortega regime has appointed and dismissed at least seven ambassadors in Cuba, including Sidhartha Marín Aráuz, who served only 11 days in the position.
The dismissal occurs at a time of increasing weakening of the Ortega-Maduro-Castro axis. On January 3, 2026, U.S. forces captured the Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro in Caracas during "Operation Absolute Resolution." Maduro faces federal charges of narco-terrorism and cocaine trafficking.
In that context, U.S. President Donald Trump warned that there will be an agreement or we will do what we have to do regarding Cuba, while Senator Marco Rubio stated that the system of government in Cuba has to change.
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