Francisca Ramírez Tórrez was born in 1977 in a small rural community then known as Somoza in Nueva Guinea on the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua Ramírez's family was originally from the Pacific coast of Nicaragua but had been displaced in the 1950s in a Somozas regime program of relocating farmers with small orchards in the region to make way for burgeoning cotton crops. These farmers, including Ramírez's family, were moved to so-called "colonies" on the Caribbean coast, at the time virgin forest. Ramírez's parents had five children, but her father left during the war when she was seven years old, after which she was charged with helping her mother raise her siblings. She left school after the third grade and at 12 she began traveling to Managua to sell crops for local farmers.
Activism
Ramírez now owns her own land in La Fonseca, as well as a small fleet of trucks with which she and her husband and children transport crops. Like her neighbors in the rural community, Ramírez's family is economically dependent on the land they farm and became alarmed when Chinese surveyors arrived without notice to begin measuring their land for canal development. Ramírez began organizing a response when she learned they were at risk of being displaced by the land expropriationLaw 840 authorized in granting Chinese company HKND the concession for the proposed inter-oceanic canal and other infrastructure projects. As part of this organizing, Ramírez served as head of the environmental and peasants rights organization, the National Council for the Defense of the Land, Lake and Sovereignty. Per its bylaws, the Council for the Defense of the Land functions as a non-partisan and self-mobilized grassroots movement, independent of political party or NGO affiliation, and Ramírez personally does not belong to a political party; she has refused offers of office in exchange for joining a party. She has also declined to participate in closed-door meetings with President Daniel Ortega, and turned down high-priced buyouts for her land offered in exchange for ceasing her activism. In December 2016, Nicaraguan National Police seized two of Ramírez's work vehicles. In the April 2018 protests in Nicaragua, Ramírez with other leaders of the peasants movement issued a statement of support for the youth and self-organized grassroots protesters and called for a general strike.