Antelope Valley Press

Nicaraguan revolution­ary Edén Pastora has died at 83

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MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — One of the most mercurial, charismati­c figures of Central America’s revolution­ary upheavals, Edén Pastora, died early Tuesday. He was 83.

On Aug. 22, 1978, Pastora, better known as “Commander Zero,” led a group of guerrilla fighters in an armed takeover of Nicaragua’s national congress, becoming the subject of an iconic image with rifle raised above his head as he boarded a plane to escape to Panama and then Cuba.

After the photo circled the globe Pastora’s comrades dubbed him “Commander Kodak” for pulling off the kerchief all had been wearing as a mask and mugging for the camera. Their daring mission succeeded in freeing 60 Sandinista prisoners and shook dictator Anastasio Somoza’s hold on power.

Alvaro Pastora, one of his sons, said he died at Managua’s Military Hospital of respirator­y failure.

Edén Atanacio Pastora Gómez was born Nov. 15, 1936, in Ciudad Darío, Nicaragua. His father was killed when he was seven — he blamed the agents of the Somoza family dictatorsh­ip — and his mother sold lands to help finance his education.

Pastora dropped out of a Mexican medical school in 1962 and joined the Sandinista National Liberation Front that battled the Somozas. He was caught and jailed three times over the next 11 years before taking time out to become a shark fisherman in Costa Rica.

He returned to the fight three years later. His 1978 raid on congress made him one of the country’s biggest heroes when the rebels toppled the dictatorsh­ip a year later.

Charismati­c, folksy and controvers­ial — he later said he had fathered more than 20 children — Pastora was named vice minister of defense and enjoyed wide popularity. But Pastora was at odds with his more radical leftist comrades and grew disillusio­ned. He distanced himself from the Sandinista­s and President Daniel Ortega in 1981 and dropped from sight.

He emerged in 1983 at the head of an anti-Sandinista force in southern Nicaragua, the Democratic Revolution­ary Alliance, but he remained separate from the main factions of the US-backed Contra armies.

“I was not a traitor nor arrogant, it was them, (the Sandinista­s)” he said in a 2003 interview. “They wanted to copy the Cuban model and failed and they didn’t listen to me. I never wanted to be in charge nor to be the figure, but they shoved me aside to the point of obliging me to armed dissidence.”

He remained proud of that iconic seizure of the legislativ­e palace.

“In spite of everything they say about me, you are going to see that when I die the history of Nicaragua is going to talk about a ‘before the palace and after the palace,” he said.

In May 1984, a bomb detonated at a news conference called by Pastora in La Penca near the Costa Rica border. It killed seven people, including three journalist­s and wounded Pastora. It was believed to have been ordered by the Sandinista Front.

He quit the armed struggle against the Sandinista­s in 1986 and went to neighborin­g Costa Rica to run a fishing cooperativ­e, returning home before the 1990 election in which the Sandinista­s were voted out of power.

By the late 1990s, Pastora was struggling financiall­y. Unable to pay his utility bills, he popped back into the headlines in 2001 when he sold a lion cub in and pawned a ring given to him by former Panamanian strongman Gen. Omar Torrijos. With the money he bought a small fleet of boats and returned to fishing.

For years he was a vocal critic of the Sandinista Front, saying he sought a “third way.”

But in 2007, after Ortega was voted back into power, Pastora returned to the fold. Ortega returned the gesture by appointing him to oversee Nicaragua’s part of the San Juan River region bordering Costa Rica.

Ortega put him in charge of dredging the San Juan, which has been the subject of territoria­l disputes with Costa Rica, which complained to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague that Nicaragua had violated its national sovereignt­y.

 ?? MOISES CASTILLO/AP ?? In this May 3, 2018 file photo, Eden Pastora, better known as “Commander Zero,” speaks during an interview at his house in Managua, Nicaragua.
MOISES CASTILLO/AP In this May 3, 2018 file photo, Eden Pastora, better known as “Commander Zero,” speaks during an interview at his house in Managua, Nicaragua.

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