Rosario Murillo

President

Birthday June 22, 1951

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Managua, Nicaragua

Age 72 years old

Nationality Nicaragua

#45245 Most Popular

1915

Her father was Teódulo Murillo Molina (1915–1996), a cotton grower and livestock owner.

1926

Her mother was Zoilamérica Zambrana Sandino (1926–1973; the daughter of Orlando José Zambrana Báez and Zoilamérica Sandino Tiffer), a niece of General Augusto César Sandino (1895–1934) who fought against the US occupation in Nicaragua.

Murillo's maternal grandmother, Zoilamérica Sandino Tiffer, was a paternal half-sister of Augusto Nicolás Calderón Sandino, also known as Augusto César Sandino.

She married Daniel Ortega and had eight children.

According to Nicaraguan historian Roberto Sánchez, Murillo is maternally related to Nicaragua's national hero, Augusto Sandino.

Murillo was schooled at Colegio Teresiano in Managua, a K-12 Catholic, all-girls school, also known as Saint Teresa's Academy.

She attended high school at the Greenway Convent Collegiate School in Tiverton, Great Britain, and studied Art at the Institut Anglo-Suisse Le Manoir at La Neuveville in Switzerland.

Murillo possesses certificates in the English and French language, granted respectively by the University of Cambridge in Great Britain.

She also attended the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua in her hometown.

1951

Rosario María Murillo Zambrana (born 22 June 1951) is a Nicaraguan politician and poet who has held the position of Vice President of Nicaragua, the country's second highest office, since January 2017 and First Lady of Nicaragua since 2007 and from 1985 to 1990 as the wife of President Daniel Ortega.

Murillo has served as the Nicaraguan government's lead spokesperson, government minister, head of the Sandinista Association of Cultural Workers, and Communications Coordinator of the Council on Communication and Citizenry.

1969

Murillo joined the Sandinista National Liberation Front in 1969, and provided shelter in her house, which was located in the Barrio San José Oriental in Managua, to Sandinista guerrillas, among them Tomás Borge, one of the founders of the FSLN.

1970

During the early 1970s Murillo worked for La Prensa as a secretary to two of Nicaragua's leading political and literary figures, Pedro Joaquin Chamorro and Pablo Antonio Cuadra.

1976

Murillo was arrested in Estelí in 1976 for her activities in politics.

Soon after, she fled and lived for several months in Panama and Venezuela.

She later moved to Costa Rica where she dedicated herself completely to her political work with the FSLN, helped start Radio Sandino, and met her future husband, Daniel Ortega.

1979

When the Sandinistas overthrew Somoza in 1979, she returned to Nicaragua.

1990

Murillo defended Ortega when her daughter Zoilamérica accused her stepfather Ortega of sexual abuse in the 1990s, which still affects her reputation with some Nicaraguans.

Although Zoilamérica tried to pursue legal action, Ortega had immunity as a member of the National Assembly.

Murillo is known for her New Age beliefs and practices.

1998

Murillo started to gain power politically in 1998 after defending Ortega after he was accused by his stepdaughter, Zoilamérica Narváez Murrillo, Murillo's daughter, of sexually abusing her for many years.

Murillo stated that the accusations were "a total falsehood" and afterwards sided unconditionally with Ortega and publicly shunned her daughter who has still maintained that her accusations were true.

2001

The case was thrown out by the Supreme Court in 2001 because the statute of limitations had expired.

2005

Murillo and Ortega were married in 2005.

2006

Ortega was elected president in 2006 and re-elected in 2011.

2016

In the 2016 general election Murillo ran as Ortega's vice-presidential candidate.

She is "widely seen as the power behind the presidency" according to Al Jazeera's Lucia Newman.

2017

She was sworn in as vice president of Nicaragua on 10 January 2017.

In August 2021, she was personally sanctioned by the European Union, over alleged human rights violations.

Murillo was born in Managua, Nicaragua.

2018

During her term, a series of protests broke out, resulting in 309 deaths by July 2018, some 25 of casualties being under the age of 17.

Murillo and aide Néstor Moncada Lau were particularly targeted in an executive order issued by U.S. President Donald Trump on 27 November 2018.

This executive order is one of several sanctions placed against her and her husband's government by the United States since the unrest began.

A polyglot, she speaks Spanish, English, Italian and French; she also reads German.

Rosario Murillo is Roman Catholic with strong Marian veneration

2019

Rosario Murillo is featured in the 2019 documentary film Exiliada, which revolves around her daughter, Zoilamérica Narváez, and her sexual abuse complaints against Daniel Ortega.