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Fernando Belaúnde

Fernando Sergio Marcelo Marcos Belaúnde Terry (October 7, 1912 – June 4, 2002) was a Peruvian politician who twice served as President of Peru (1963–1968 and 1980–1985). Deposed by a military coup in 1968, he was re-elected in 1980 after twelve years of military rule.

Fernando Belaúnde Terry
Belaúnde in 1990
52nd President of Peru
In office
28 July 1980 – 28 July 1985
Prime MinisterManuel Ulloa Elías
Fernando Schwalb
Sandro Mariátegui Chiappe
Luis Pércovich Roca
Vice PresidentFernando Schwalb
Javier Alva Orlandini
Preceded byFrancisco Morales Bermúdez
(as President of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Government)
Succeeded byAlan García
In office
28 July 1963 – 3 October 1968
Prime MinisterJulio Óscar Trelles Montes
Fernando Schwalb
Daniel Becerra de la Flor
Edgardo Seoane Corrales
Raúl Ferrero Rebagliati
Oswaldo Hercelles García
Miguel Mujica Gallo
Vice PresidentEdgardo Seoane
Mario Polar Ugarteche
Preceded byNicolás Lindley López
(as President of the Military Junta)
Succeeded byJuan Velasco Alvarado
(as President of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Government)
Senator for Life
Former President of the Republic
In office
26 July 1985 – 5 April 1992
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
28 July 1945 – 29 October 1948
ConstituencyLima
Leader of Popular Action
In office
7 July 1956 – 2001
Preceded byParty founded
Succeeded byValentín Paniagua (as Party President)
Personal details
Born
Fernando Sergio Marcelo Marcos Belaúnde Terry

(1912-10-07)7 October 1912
Lima, Peru
Died4 June 2002(2002-06-04) (aged 89)
Lima, Peru
Political partyPopular Action
Spouse(s)Violeta Correa Miller
Carola Aubry Bravo
Children3
Alma materUniversity of Miami
University of Texas at Austin
ProfessionArchitect
Signature

Early life and education edit

The second of four children, Belaúnde was born in Lima into a wealthy aristocratic family of Spanish forebears: his father, Rafael Belaúnde Diez Canseco (1886–1972), a professor, served as Prime Minister under José Bustamante y Rivero; his paternal grandfather, Mariano Andrés Belaunde, was a Finance Minister; and one of his great-grandfathers, Pedro Diez Canseco, was also President of the Republic.[1][2] He attended the Sagrados Corazones Recoleta in Lima.[3]

During the dictatorship of Augusto B. Leguía, the persecution for the political activities of his father Rafael and his uncle Víctor Andrés Belaúnde prompted the family to move to France in 1924, where Fernando attended high school and received his initial University education in engineering.

From 1930 to 1935, Belaúnde studied architecture in the United States, where he first attended the University of Miami (where his father was also teaching), and in 1935 transferred to the University of Texas at Austin, where he obtained his degree as an architect. He would later become pro-American and became very proficient in the English language, with some referring to him as "Fred Blundy".[2]

He later moved to Mexico and worked as an architect for a brief time, but returned to Peru in 1936 and started his professional career as an architect designing private homes. In 1937, he started a magazine called El Arquitecto Peruano ("Peruvian Architect"), which dealt with interior design, general urbanism and housing problems the country was facing. This also gave way to the Architects Association of Peru and the Urbanism Institute of Peru.

As a result, Belaúnde also became a government public-housing consultant throughout the country and abroad. In 1943, Belaúnde began teaching architecture and urban planning at Escuela Nacional de Ingenieros of Lima and later became the dean of the Civil Engineering and Architecture department. Belaúnde also directed the construction, along with other professors and students, of the faculty of architecture of the National University of Engineering in 1955.

Political career edit

Belaúnde's political career began in 1944 as cofounder of the National Democratic Front party which elected José Bustamante as president in 1945; he served in the Peruvian Congress until a coup by General Manuel Odría in 1948 interrupted democratic elections.

Belaúnde returned to the political arena in 1956, when the outgoing Odría dictatorship called for elections and he led the slate submitted by the "National Front of Democratic Youth", an organization formed by reform-minded university students, some of which had studied under him; his principled support for the La Prensa newspaper, which had been closed down by the dictatorship in early 1956, had prompted the leadership of the National Front to approach him as to lead its slate.

"El Manguerazo" edit

He gained notoriety on June 1 of the same year when, after the national election board refused to accept his candidacy filing, he led a massive protest that became known as the "manguerazo" or "hosedown" from the powerful water cannons used by the police to repress the demonstrators. When it seemed that the confrontation was going to turn violent, Belaúnde showed the gift for symbolism that would serve him well throughout his political life; calming down the demonstrators and armed solely with a Peruvian flag, he crossed alone the gap separating the demonstrators from the police to deliver an ultimatum to the police chief that his candidacy be accepted.

The government capitulated, and the striking image of Belaúnde walking by himself with the flag was featured by the news magazine Caretas the following day, in an article entitled "Así Nacen Los Líderes" ("This is how Leaders are Born").

Founding of Acción Popular edit

Belaúnde's 1956 candidacy was ultimately unsuccessful, as the dictatorship-favored right-wing candidacy of Manuel Prado took first place. Claiming irregularities, he prepared to lead the opposition, and in July 1956 in Chincheros, Cuzco, founded the center-right Acción Popular party, claiming the mantle of recapturing indigenous Inca traditions of community and cooperation in a modern social democratic context, placing itself squarely between the pro-oligarchy right-wing and the radicalism of the left-wing APRA and communist parties.

He would go on to travel extensively throughout the country, fleshing out the ideological principles of Acción Popular, while leading the opposition. During this period Belaúnde's traditionalism would manifest itself in dramatic flourishes, most notoriously when he challenged to a duel a Pradista congressman who refused to retract insulting statements in an open letter; the duel took place, with minor scratches on both sides.

In 1959, the Prado government's refusal to authorize the permits for the Accion Popular annual convention led to another confrontation: Belaúnde led the opening of the convention in defiance of the prohibition, and the Prado government arrested and jailed him in the Alcatraz-like island prison of El Frontón off the Lima coast. The imprisonment lasted 12 days, during which Belaúnde engaged in a failed attempt to escape by swimming to freedom; the Prado government, facing unrelenting public pressure, was forced to release him and drop all charges.

Belaúnde ran for president once again in the general elections of 1962, this time with his own party, Acción Popular. The results were very tight; he ended in second place, following Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre (APRA), by less than 14,000 votes. Since none of the candidates managed to get the constitutionally-established minimum of one third of the vote required to win outright, selection of the President would fall to Congress; the long-held antagonistic relationship between the military and APRA prompted Haya de la Torre to make a deal with former dictator Odría, who had come in third, which would result in Odría taking the Presidency in a coalition government.

However, widespread allegations of fraud prompted the Peruvian military to depose Prado and install a military junta, led by Ricardo Pérez Godoy. Pérez Godoy ran a short transitional government and held new elections in 1963, which were won by Belaúnde by a more comfortable but still narrow five percent margin.

First presidency (1963–1968) edit

During Belaúnde's first term in office, he spurred numerous developmental projects. Belaúnde held a doctrine called "The Conquest of Peru by Peruvians", which promoted the exploitation of resources in the Amazon rainforest and other outlying areas of Peru through conquest,[4] stating "only by turning our vision to the interior, and conquering our wilderness as the United States once did, will South America finally achieve true development".[2] These included the Carretera Marginal de la Selva, a highway linking Chiclayo on the Pacific coast with then isolated northern regions of Amazonas and San Martín. In 1964 in an incident called the Matsé genocide [es], the Belaúnde administration targeted the Matsés after two loggers were killed, with the Peruvian armed forces and American fighter planes dropping napalm on the indigenous groups armed with bows and arrows, killing hundreds.[4][5]

He also advanced the ambitious Santiago Antunez de Mayolo and Chira Piura irrigation projects, and the Tinajones, Jequetepeque, Majes, Chavimochic, Olmos, Chinecas hydroelectric projects. Belaúnde also oversaw the establishment of the Peruvian National Bank (Banco de la Nación). To alleviate poverty, Belaúnde also promoted a program of "social interest" homes in Lima and other cities, which benefited dozen thousands of families. Legal recognition was also given to hundreds of indigenous Indian communities,[6] the hospital network was expanded into uncovered areas,[7] and improvements were made in social security coverage.[8] However, his administration was also blamed for making bad economic decisions, and by 1967 the sol had become seriously devalued.

In August 1968, the Belaúnde Administration announced the settlement of a long-standing dispute with a subsidiary of Standard Oil of New Jersey over claims to the rich La Brea and Pariñas oil fields. However, widespread anger about Belaúnde's decision to pay the Standard Oil compensation for handing over the installation to Peru forced his cabinet to resign on October 1. A further cause of anger was the fact that the document of agreement was given by Belaúnde to the press with the final page (page 11) missing and signatures were squeezed at the bottom of page 10. The missing page became a cause célèbre and was later shown on television containing the contribution that Belaúnde had promised to pay.

The military's ideology at the time had also distanced itself from the wealthy elite, with the Center of High Military Studies promoting studies of Manuel González Prada and José Carlos Mariátegui for about a decade, creating officers that believed the elite were sacrificing Peru's sovereignty in exchange for foreign capital and that such practices resulted with an undeveloped, reliant nation.[9] Several days after the Standard Oil controversy, Belaúnde was removed from office by a military coup led by general Juan Velasco Alvarado, who would go on to become dictator of Peru for seven years. Belaúnde spent the next decade in the United States, teaching at Harvard, Johns Hopkins and George Washington University.[10] Meanwhile the military regime established by General Velasco instituted sweeping but ill-fated reforms, primarily the nationalization of the oil industry and the redistribution of land from owners of large holdings to the campesinos of Peru.

Second presidency (1980–1985) edit

In April 1980, with Peru's economy in deep depression, the military administration permitted an election for the restoration of constitutional rule. Belaúnde won a five-year term, polling an impressive 45 percent of the vote in a 15-man contest.[citation needed] One of his first actions as president was the return of several newspapers to their respective owners. In this way, freedom of speech once again played an important part in Peruvian politics. Gradually, he attempted to undo some of the most radical effects of the agrarian reform initiated by Velasco, and reversed the independent stance that the Military Government of Velasco had with the United States.

At the outbreak of the 1982 Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas) between Argentina and the United Kingdom, Belaúnde declared that Peru was ready to support Argentina with all the resources it needed. This included a number of fighter planes from the Peruvian Air Force, ships, and medical teams. Belaúnde's government proposed a peace settlement between the two countries, but the Argentine military junta rejected it[11][12] and the British launched an attack on the Argentinian forces deployed around the islands. In response to Chile's support of Britain, Belaúnde called for Latin American unity.

In domestic policy, he continued with many of the projects that were planned during his first term, including the completion of what is considered his most important legacy, the Carretera Marginal de la Selva, a much-needed roadway linking Chiclayo on the Pacific coast with then isolated northern regions of Amazonas and San Martín.

After a promising beginning, Belaúnde's popularity eroded under the stress of inflation, the War on Housing's continuation, economic hardship, and terrorism: per capita income declined, Peru's foreign debt burgeoned, and violence by leftist insurgents (notably Shining Path) rose steadily during the internal conflict in Peru, which was launched the day before Belaúnde was elected in 1980. He was president during the peak of the Lost Decade, in which unemployment rose above 50% and homelessness rose above 30%.

Regarding Shining Path, Belaúnde personally did not pay too much attention to this: insurgent movements were already active during his first term, but without much support. In addition, some government officials and insurgents were subsequently accused of human rights violations, and a state of emergency was promulgated in the Ayacucho and Apurímac regions.

During the next years, the economic problems left over from the military government persisted, worsened by an occurrence of the "El Niño" weather phenomenon in 1982–83, which caused widespread flooding in some parts of the country, severe droughts in others, and sharply reduced the schools of ocean fish that are one of the country's major resources.

Post-presidency (1985–2002) edit

During the national elections of 1985, Belaúnde's party, Acción Popular, was defeated by APRA candidate Alan García. However, as established in the 1979 Constitution, he would go on to serve in the Peruvian Senate as Senador Vitalicio ("senator for life"), a privilege for former Presidents abolished by the 1993 Constitution.

Political views edit

Belaúnde’s political outlook was centre-right, pro-American, and conservative.[2][13] The Guardian described him as "a 19th century politician, with a high moral purpose and a sense of civic duty, who was perfectly at home in the conservative political milieu of 20th-century Peru, which for long occupied a time-warp, unusual even in Latin America, about a century behind the rest of the world".[2] During the Falklands War, he supported the claims of Argentina.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gunther, John, Inside South America, p. 322
  2. ^ a b c d e f Gott, Richard (2002-06-06). "Fernando Belaúnde". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
  3. ^ Novak, Fabián. Las relaciones entre el Perú y Alemania, 1828–2003 (Serie Política exterior peruana). Fondo Editorial PUCP, 2004. ISBN 9972426343, 9789972426346. p. 45.
  4. ^ a b Dourojeanni, Marc J. (12 June 2017). "Belaúnde en la Amazonía". Centro Amazónico de Antropología y Aplicación Práctica (CAAAP) (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  5. ^ LR, Redacción (9 June 2018). "Terrorista "José" amenaza con más ataques a las fuerzas del orden". La República (in Spanish). from the original on 10 June 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  6. ^ Alexander, Robert Jackson; Parker, Eldon M. (1 January 2007). A History of Organized Labor in Peru and Ecuador. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780275977412.
  7. ^ Haggard, Stephan; Kaufman, Robert R. (August 24, 2020). "CHAPTER TWO. The Expansion of Welfare Commitments in Latin America, 1945–80". Development, Democracy, and Welfare States. Princeton University Press. pp. 79–113. doi:10.1515/9780691214153-007. ISBN 978-0-691-21415-3 – via www.degruyter.com.
  8. ^ Mesa-Lago, Carmelo (15 November 1978). Social Security in Latin America: Pressure Groups, Stratification, and Inequality. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 9780822976202.
  9. ^ Gorman, Stephen M. (September 1980). "The Economic and Social Foundations of Elite Power in Peru: A Review of the Literature". Social and Economic Studies. 29 (2/3). University of the West Indies: 292–319.
  10. ^ Lewis, Paul (6 June 2002). "Fernando Belaunde Terry, 89, Former Peruvian Leader, Dies". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  11. ^ "The Deseret News – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  12. ^ "Peruvian Peace Initiative Believed To Retain Some Chance for Gains". The Washington Post. 4 May 1982.
  13. ^ "Peruvian rebel storms government party HQ". Christian Science Monitor. 13 July 1983. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2023-04-05.

Further reading edit

  • Peru's Own Conquest by Fernando Belaúnde Terry (translated by David A. Robinson)
  • Inside South America by John Gunther
  • Peru: A Country Study, published by the United States Library of Congress

External links edit

  • [Adelante.doc] Editorial del Diario Expreso
  • Extended biography by CIDOB Foundation (in Spanish)
  • "Peru mourns death of 'model democrat'" (BBC News)
  • El Arquitecto Peruano, Belaúnde's magazine (Spanish and English)
  • Fernando Belaunde Terry recorded at the Library of Congress for the Hispanic Division’s audio literary archive on April 22, 1977
Party political offices
Preceded by
Acción Popular presidential candidate
1962 (lost)
1963 (won)
1980 (won)
Succeeded by
Javier Alva Orlandini
Preceded by
General Secretary of Acción Popular
July 1956 – August 2001
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by President of Peru
July 1963 – October 1968
Succeeded by
Juan Velasco
President of the Revolutionary Government
Preceded by President of Peru
July 1980 – July 1985
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Senator of the Republic of Peru
July 1985 – April 1992
Succeeded by
none
(Senate dissolved)

fernando, belaúnde, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, belaúnde, second, maternal, family, name, terry, fernando, sergio, marcelo, marcos, belaúnde, terry, october, 1912, june, 2002, peruvian, politician, twice, served, president, peru, 1963, 1968,. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Belaunde and the second or maternal family name is Terry Fernando Sergio Marcelo Marcos Belaunde Terry October 7 1912 June 4 2002 was a Peruvian politician who twice served as President of Peru 1963 1968 and 1980 1985 Deposed by a military coup in 1968 he was re elected in 1980 after twelve years of military rule Fernando Belaunde TerryBelaunde in 199052nd President of PeruIn office 28 July 1980 28 July 1985Prime MinisterManuel Ulloa EliasFernando SchwalbSandro Mariategui ChiappeLuis Percovich RocaVice PresidentFernando SchwalbJavier Alva OrlandiniPreceded byFrancisco Morales Bermudez as President of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Government Succeeded byAlan GarciaIn office 28 July 1963 3 October 1968Prime MinisterJulio oscar Trelles MontesFernando SchwalbDaniel Becerra de la FlorEdgardo Seoane CorralesRaul Ferrero RebagliatiOswaldo Hercelles GarciaMiguel Mujica GalloVice PresidentEdgardo SeoaneMario Polar UgartechePreceded byNicolas Lindley Lopez as President of the Military Junta Succeeded byJuan Velasco Alvarado as President of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Government Senator for LifeFormer President of the RepublicIn office 26 July 1985 5 April 1992Member of the Chamber of DeputiesIn office 28 July 1945 29 October 1948ConstituencyLimaLeader of Popular ActionIn office 7 July 1956 2001Preceded byParty foundedSucceeded byValentin Paniagua as Party President Personal detailsBornFernando Sergio Marcelo Marcos Belaunde Terry 1912 10 07 7 October 1912Lima PeruDied4 June 2002 2002 06 04 aged 89 Lima PeruPolitical partyPopular ActionSpouse s Violeta Correa MillerCarola Aubry BravoChildren3Alma materUniversity of MiamiUniversity of Texas at AustinProfessionArchitectSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political career 2 1 El Manguerazo 2 2 Founding of Accion Popular 2 3 First presidency 1963 1968 2 4 Second presidency 1980 1985 2 5 Post presidency 1985 2002 3 Political views 4 Notes 5 Further reading 6 External linksEarly life and education editThe second of four children Belaunde was born in Lima into a wealthy aristocratic family of Spanish forebears his father Rafael Belaunde Diez Canseco 1886 1972 a professor served as Prime Minister under Jose Bustamante y Rivero his paternal grandfather Mariano Andres Belaunde was a Finance Minister and one of his great grandfathers Pedro Diez Canseco was also President of the Republic 1 2 He attended the Sagrados Corazones Recoleta in Lima 3 During the dictatorship of Augusto B Leguia the persecution for the political activities of his father Rafael and his uncle Victor Andres Belaunde prompted the family to move to France in 1924 where Fernando attended high school and received his initial University education in engineering From 1930 to 1935 Belaunde studied architecture in the United States where he first attended the University of Miami where his father was also teaching and in 1935 transferred to the University of Texas at Austin where he obtained his degree as an architect He would later become pro American and became very proficient in the English language with some referring to him as Fred Blundy 2 He later moved to Mexico and worked as an architect for a brief time but returned to Peru in 1936 and started his professional career as an architect designing private homes In 1937 he started a magazine called El Arquitecto Peruano Peruvian Architect which dealt with interior design general urbanism and housing problems the country was facing This also gave way to the Architects Association of Peru and the Urbanism Institute of Peru As a result Belaunde also became a government public housing consultant throughout the country and abroad In 1943 Belaunde began teaching architecture and urban planning at Escuela Nacional de Ingenieros of Lima and later became the dean of the Civil Engineering and Architecture department Belaunde also directed the construction along with other professors and students of the faculty of architecture of the National University of Engineering in 1955 Political career editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Belaunde s political career began in 1944 as cofounder of the National Democratic Front party which elected Jose Bustamante as president in 1945 he served in the Peruvian Congress until a coup by General Manuel Odria in 1948 interrupted democratic elections Belaunde returned to the political arena in 1956 when the outgoing Odria dictatorship called for elections and he led the slate submitted by the National Front of Democratic Youth an organization formed by reform minded university students some of which had studied under him his principled support for the La Prensa newspaper which had been closed down by the dictatorship in early 1956 had prompted the leadership of the National Front to approach him as to lead its slate El Manguerazo edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message He gained notoriety on June 1 of the same year when after the national election board refused to accept his candidacy filing he led a massive protest that became known as the manguerazo or hosedown from the powerful water cannons used by the police to repress the demonstrators When it seemed that the confrontation was going to turn violent Belaunde showed the gift for symbolism that would serve him well throughout his political life calming down the demonstrators and armed solely with a Peruvian flag he crossed alone the gap separating the demonstrators from the police to deliver an ultimatum to the police chief that his candidacy be accepted The government capitulated and the striking image of Belaunde walking by himself with the flag was featured by the news magazine Caretas the following day in an article entitled Asi Nacen Los Lideres This is how Leaders are Born Founding of Accion Popular edit Belaunde s 1956 candidacy was ultimately unsuccessful as the dictatorship favored right wing candidacy of Manuel Prado took first place Claiming irregularities he prepared to lead the opposition and in July 1956 in Chincheros Cuzco founded the center right Accion Popular party claiming the mantle of recapturing indigenous Inca traditions of community and cooperation in a modern social democratic context placing itself squarely between the pro oligarchy right wing and the radicalism of the left wing APRA and communist parties He would go on to travel extensively throughout the country fleshing out the ideological principles of Accion Popular while leading the opposition During this period Belaunde s traditionalism would manifest itself in dramatic flourishes most notoriously when he challenged to a duel a Pradista congressman who refused to retract insulting statements in an open letter the duel took place with minor scratches on both sides In 1959 the Prado government s refusal to authorize the permits for the Accion Popular annual convention led to another confrontation Belaunde led the opening of the convention in defiance of the prohibition and the Prado government arrested and jailed him in the Alcatraz like island prison of El Fronton off the Lima coast The imprisonment lasted 12 days during which Belaunde engaged in a failed attempt to escape by swimming to freedom the Prado government facing unrelenting public pressure was forced to release him and drop all charges Belaunde ran for president once again in the general elections of 1962 this time with his own party Accion Popular The results were very tight he ended in second place following Victor Raul Haya de la Torre APRA by less than 14 000 votes Since none of the candidates managed to get the constitutionally established minimum of one third of the vote required to win outright selection of the President would fall to Congress the long held antagonistic relationship between the military and APRA prompted Haya de la Torre to make a deal with former dictator Odria who had come in third which would result in Odria taking the Presidency in a coalition government However widespread allegations of fraud prompted the Peruvian military to depose Prado and install a military junta led by Ricardo Perez Godoy Perez Godoy ran a short transitional government and held new elections in 1963 which were won by Belaunde by a more comfortable but still narrow five percent margin First presidency 1963 1968 edit During Belaunde s first term in office he spurred numerous developmental projects Belaunde held a doctrine called The Conquest of Peru by Peruvians which promoted the exploitation of resources in the Amazon rainforest and other outlying areas of Peru through conquest 4 stating only by turning our vision to the interior and conquering our wilderness as the United States once did will South America finally achieve true development 2 These included the Carretera Marginal de la Selva a highway linking Chiclayo on the Pacific coast with then isolated northern regions of Amazonas and San Martin In 1964 in an incident called the Matse genocide es the Belaunde administration targeted the Matses after two loggers were killed with the Peruvian armed forces and American fighter planes dropping napalm on the indigenous groups armed with bows and arrows killing hundreds 4 5 He also advanced the ambitious Santiago Antunez de Mayolo and Chira Piura irrigation projects and the Tinajones Jequetepeque Majes Chavimochic Olmos Chinecas hydroelectric projects Belaunde also oversaw the establishment of the Peruvian National Bank Banco de la Nacion To alleviate poverty Belaunde also promoted a program of social interest homes in Lima and other cities which benefited dozen thousands of families Legal recognition was also given to hundreds of indigenous Indian communities 6 the hospital network was expanded into uncovered areas 7 and improvements were made in social security coverage 8 However his administration was also blamed for making bad economic decisions and by 1967 the sol had become seriously devalued In August 1968 the Belaunde Administration announced the settlement of a long standing dispute with a subsidiary of Standard Oil of New Jersey over claims to the rich La Brea and Parinas oil fields However widespread anger about Belaunde s decision to pay the Standard Oil compensation for handing over the installation to Peru forced his cabinet to resign on October 1 A further cause of anger was the fact that the document of agreement was given by Belaunde to the press with the final page page 11 missing and signatures were squeezed at the bottom of page 10 The missing page became a cause celebre and was later shown on television containing the contribution that Belaunde had promised to pay The military s ideology at the time had also distanced itself from the wealthy elite with the Center of High Military Studies promoting studies of Manuel Gonzalez Prada and Jose Carlos Mariategui for about a decade creating officers that believed the elite were sacrificing Peru s sovereignty in exchange for foreign capital and that such practices resulted with an undeveloped reliant nation 9 Several days after the Standard Oil controversy Belaunde was removed from office by a military coup led by general Juan Velasco Alvarado who would go on to become dictator of Peru for seven years Belaunde spent the next decade in the United States teaching at Harvard Johns Hopkins and George Washington University 10 Meanwhile the military regime established by General Velasco instituted sweeping but ill fated reforms primarily the nationalization of the oil industry and the redistribution of land from owners of large holdings to the campesinos of Peru Second presidency 1980 1985 edit In April 1980 with Peru s economy in deep depression the military administration permitted an election for the restoration of constitutional rule Belaunde won a five year term polling an impressive 45 percent of the vote in a 15 man contest citation needed One of his first actions as president was the return of several newspapers to their respective owners In this way freedom of speech once again played an important part in Peruvian politics Gradually he attempted to undo some of the most radical effects of the agrarian reform initiated by Velasco and reversed the independent stance that the Military Government of Velasco had with the United States At the outbreak of the 1982 Falklands War Spanish Guerra de las Malvinas between Argentina and the United Kingdom Belaunde declared that Peru was ready to support Argentina with all the resources it needed This included a number of fighter planes from the Peruvian Air Force ships and medical teams Belaunde s government proposed a peace settlement between the two countries but the Argentine military junta rejected it 11 12 and the British launched an attack on the Argentinian forces deployed around the islands In response to Chile s support of Britain Belaunde called for Latin American unity In domestic policy he continued with many of the projects that were planned during his first term including the completion of what is considered his most important legacy the Carretera Marginal de la Selva a much needed roadway linking Chiclayo on the Pacific coast with then isolated northern regions of Amazonas and San Martin After a promising beginning Belaunde s popularity eroded under the stress of inflation the War on Housing s continuation economic hardship and terrorism per capita income declined Peru s foreign debt burgeoned and violence by leftist insurgents notably Shining Path rose steadily during the internal conflict in Peru which was launched the day before Belaunde was elected in 1980 He was president during the peak of the Lost Decade in which unemployment rose above 50 and homelessness rose above 30 Regarding Shining Path Belaunde personally did not pay too much attention to this insurgent movements were already active during his first term but without much support In addition some government officials and insurgents were subsequently accused of human rights violations and a state of emergency was promulgated in the Ayacucho and Apurimac regions During the next years the economic problems left over from the military government persisted worsened by an occurrence of the El Nino weather phenomenon in 1982 83 which caused widespread flooding in some parts of the country severe droughts in others and sharply reduced the schools of ocean fish that are one of the country s major resources Post presidency 1985 2002 edit During the national elections of 1985 Belaunde s party Accion Popular was defeated by APRA candidate Alan Garcia However as established in the 1979 Constitution he would go on to serve in the Peruvian Senate as Senador Vitalicio senator for life a privilege for former Presidents abolished by the 1993 Constitution Political views editBelaunde s political outlook was centre right pro American and conservative 2 13 The Guardian described him as a 19th century politician with a high moral purpose and a sense of civic duty who was perfectly at home in the conservative political milieu of 20th century Peru which for long occupied a time warp unusual even in Latin America about a century behind the rest of the world 2 During the Falklands War he supported the claims of Argentina 2 Notes edit Gunther John Inside South America p 322 a b c d e f Gott Richard 2002 06 06 Fernando Belaunde The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 04 05 Novak Fabian Las relaciones entre el Peru y Alemania 1828 2003 Serie Politica exterior peruana Fondo Editorial PUCP 2004 ISBN 9972426343 9789972426346 p 45 a b Dourojeanni Marc J 12 June 2017 Belaunde en la Amazonia Centro Amazonico de Antropologia y Aplicacion Practica CAAAP in Spanish Retrieved 14 October 2021 LR Redaccion 9 June 2018 Terrorista Jose amenaza con mas ataques a las fuerzas del orden La Republica in Spanish Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Alexander Robert Jackson Parker Eldon M 1 January 2007 A History of Organized Labor in Peru and Ecuador Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275977412 Haggard Stephan Kaufman Robert R August 24 2020 CHAPTER TWO The Expansion of Welfare Commitments in Latin America 1945 80 Development Democracy and Welfare States Princeton University Press pp 79 113 doi 10 1515 9780691214153 007 ISBN 978 0 691 21415 3 via www degruyter com Mesa Lago Carmelo 15 November 1978 Social Security in Latin America Pressure Groups Stratification and Inequality University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822976202 Gorman Stephen M September 1980 The Economic and Social Foundations of Elite Power in Peru A Review of the Literature Social and Economic Studies 29 2 3 University of the West Indies 292 319 Lewis Paul 6 June 2002 Fernando Belaunde Terry 89 Former Peruvian Leader Dies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 8 May 2016 The Deseret News Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved 8 May 2016 Peruvian Peace Initiative Believed To Retain Some Chance for Gains The Washington Post 4 May 1982 Peruvian rebel storms government party HQ Christian Science Monitor 13 July 1983 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2023 04 05 Further reading editPeru s Own Conquest by Fernando Belaunde Terry translated by David A Robinson Inside South America by John Gunther Peru A Country Study published by the United States Library of CongressExternal links edit Adelante doc Editorial del Diario Expreso Pagina oficial de Accion Popular Extended biography by CIDOB Foundation in Spanish Peru mourns death of model democrat BBC News El Arquitecto Peruano Belaunde s magazine Spanish and English Fernando Belaunde Terry recorded at the Library of Congress for the Hispanic Division s audio literary archive on April 22 1977Party political officesPreceded by Accion Popular presidential candidate1962 lost 1963 won 1980 won Succeeded byJavier Alva OrlandiniPreceded by General Secretary of Accion PopularJuly 1956 August 2001 Succeeded byValentin PaniaguaPolitical officesPreceded byNicolas Lindley President of PeruJuly 1963 October 1968 Succeeded byJuan VelascoPresident of the Revolutionary GovernmentPreceded byFrancisco Morales Bermudez President of PeruJuly 1980 July 1985 Succeeded byAlan GarciaPreceded by Senator of the Republic of PeruJuly 1985 April 1992 Succeeded bynone Senate dissolved Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fernando Belaunde amp oldid 1209286434, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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