Juan María Bordaberry
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| Juan María Bordaberry | |
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| In office March 1, 1972 – June 12, 1976 |
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| Vice President | Jorge Sapelli (1972-1973) Vacant (1973-1976) |
| Preceded by | Jorge Pacheco |
| Succeeded by | Alberto Demicheli |
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| Born | June 17, 1928 Montevideo, Uruguay |
| Political party | Colorado Party |
| Spouse | Josefina Herrán Puig |
| Profession | Rancher |
Juan María Bordaberry Arocena is a Uruguayan statesman and cattle rancher, who served as President from 1972 to 1976.
In 1973, he dissolved the General Assembly and ruled as a military-sponsored dictator until disagreements with the military led to his deposition. On November 17, 2006 he was arrested in a case involving four deaths, including two of members of the General Assembly during the period of military rule in the 1970s.
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[edit] Background
Bordaberry was born in 1928 in Montevideo, Uruguay's capital. He was the heir to one of the largest ranches in the country. Initially, he belonged to the National Party, popularly known as the Blancos, and was elected to the Senate on the Blanco ticket. In 1964, however, he assumed the leadership of Liga Nacional de Accion Ruralista (Spanish for "National Rural Action League"), and in 1969 joined the Colorado Party. That year he was appointed to the Cabinet, where he sat from 1969 to 1971 as agriculture minister in the government of President Jorge Pacheco, having had a long association with rural affairs. (See also: Domingo Bordaberry, Santiago Bordaberry.)
[edit] President of Uruguay
Bordaberry was elected president as the Colorado candidate in 1971. It has since emerged that he only won due to considerable electoral fraud. [1] He took office in 1972 in the midst of an institutional crisis caused by the authoritarian rule of Pacheco. Bordaberry, at the time, was a very minor political figure; he little independent standing as a successor to Pacheco other than being Pacheco's handpicked successor. He continued Pacheco's authoritarian methods, suspending civil liberties, banning labor unions, and imprisoning and killing opposition figures. He also appointed military officers to most leading government positions.
In personal terms, one of Bordaberry's actions which proved in hindsight to have been disadvantageous was his appointment of Jorge Sapelli as Vice President of Uruguay, given the latter's resignation and public repudiation of him in 1973.
In 1973, the military commanders threatened to throw him out of power unless he agreed to be the figurehead leader of a coup d'etat. Bordaberry gave in; on June 27, 1973 he dissolved Congress and suspended the Constitution. For the next three years, he ruled by decree with the assistance of a National Security Council.
In 1976, the military, preferring to rule directly, ousted Bordaberry from office. The military claimed that Bordaberry wanted to permanently dissolve the political parties and set up a corporatist state. He then returned to his ranch.
Pedro Bordaberry, a son of Juan Maria Bordaberry, was Tourism Minister in the government of Jorge Batlle. Another son of him, Santiago Bordaberry, is a rural affairs activist.
[edit] Arrest
On November 17, 2006, following an order by judge Roberto Timbal, Bordaberry was placed under arrest along with his former foreign minister Juan Carlos Blanco Estradé [1]. He was arrested in connection with the 1976 assassination of two legislators, Senator Zelmar Michelini of the Christian Democratic Party and House leader Héctor Gutiérrez of the National Party. The assassinations took place in Buenos Aires but the prosecution argued they had been part of Operation Condor, in which the military regimes of Uruguay and Argentina coordinated actions against dissidents. Timbal ruled that since the killings took place outside Uruguay, they were not covered by an amnesty enacted after the return of civilian rule in 1985.
Bordaberry's arrest was generally met with satisfaction and regarded as the end of impunity in Uruguay, a country considered by some to have lagged behind other Latin American nations in this matter [2]. However, former President Julio Sanguinetti has been critical of the one-sided prosecution of individuals involved in the conflict, and there has been lively media debate regarding issues surrounding Bordaberry's arrest.
One of his sons, Pedro Bordaberry, himself a former minister, has been vocal in public support for his father, and, by strong implication, for a measure of justification for the role of the civilian-military government of 1973–1985. Another son, Santiago Bordaberry, is a rancher and religious activist.
[edit] See also
- List_of_political_families#Uruguay
- Politics of Uruguay
- [[3]] (in Spanish)
[edit] References
[edit] External links
| Preceded by Jorge Pacheco |
President of Uruguay 1972–1976 |
Succeeded by Alberto Demicheli |

