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Gualberto Villarroel

Gualberto Villarroel López (15 December 1908 – 21 July 1946) was a Bolivian military officer who served as the 39th president of Bolivia from 1943 to 1946. A reformist, sometimes compared with Argentina's Juan Perón, he is nonetheless remembered for his alleged fascist sympathies and his violent demise on 21 July 1946.

Gualberto Villarroel
39th President of Bolivia
In office
20 December 1943 – 21 July 1946
Provisional: 5 April 1944 – 6 August 1944
Junta: 20 December 1943 – 5 April 1944
Vice PresidentNone (1943–1945)[a]
Julián Montellano
(1945–1946)
Preceded byEnrique Peñaranda
Succeeded byNéstor Guillén
Personal details
Born
Gualberto Villarroel López

(1908-12-15)15 December 1908
Villa Rivero, Cochabamba, Bolivia
Died21 July 1946(1946-07-21) (aged 37)
La Paz, Bolivia
Cause of deathLynch mob
Political partyRADEPA[b]
SpouseElena López
Children2
Parent(s)Enrique Casto Villarroel
María López
EducationMilitary College of the Army
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Bolivia
Branch/service Bolivian Army
Years of service1925–1935
RankColonel
UnitPérez Tercero Infantry Regiment
8th Ayacucho Infantry Regiment
Battles/warsChaco War
Awards Order of the Condor of the Andes
Order of Abdon Calderón

Early life edit

Gualberto Villarroel was born on 15 December 1908 in Villa Rivero, Cochabamba Department. He was the son of Enrique Casto Villarroel and María López. At age 11, Villarroel's parents decided that provincial education was insufficient and enrolled him fiscal school and later into the Sucre National School in Cochabamba.[1] He graduated in 1924, going on to enroll in the Military College of the Army in 1925, graduating with the rank of second lieutenant as part of the Pérez Tercero Infantry Regiment in 1928. A distinguished cadet, he was awarded the Order of Abdon Calderón for best student by the Ecuadorian government.[1] In 1931, he rose to the rank of lieutenant.

Chaco War edit

Villarroel saw action in the Chaco War (1932–35) against Paraguay. He caught the attention of Hans Kundt, commander-in-chief of the army, who highlighted the young man's creativity in combat. As part of the 8th Ayacucho Infantry Regiment, he participated in the battles of Cañada Strongest and Ybybobó being promoted to captain in 1935.[2] He also participated in the final defense of Villamontes in 1935.

After Bolivia's disastrous defeat in the conflict, he became convinced that the country needed profound structural changes and supported the progressive Military Socialist regimes of David Toro and Germán Busch. Following Busch's suicide in August 1939, conservative forces reasserted themselves, took power, and won the 1940 elections in which the traditional parties linked to the country's big mining interests triumphed at the polls with General Enrique Peñaranda.

1943 coup d'état edit

While the Peñaranda administration had managed to wrest control of government from the previous progressive political forces, it was unable to stop their spread. Villarroel became a member of RADEPA (Razón de Patria, or Fatherland's Cause), an open-military faction of young officers founded in 1934 by Bolivian prisoners of war in Paraguay. It sought mass support, backed military intervention in politics, and hoped to prevent excessive foreign control over Bolivia's natural resources.[3]

Between September and December 1943, RADEPA secretly conspired with the newly formed Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) to overthrow Peñaranda. The consequences of the Catavi massacre on 21 December 1942 which caused the deaths of 19 striking miners would ultimately bring down the government.[4] Before the coup, opposition leaders requested that the president resign. Peñaranda, in turn, evaded a response and ordered the immediate change of military assignments for the RADEPA leaders, thus removing them from the center of conflict. In response, the date of the coup was brought forward.[5]

On 20 December 1943, the RADEPA-MNR alliance overthrew the government. Former economy minister Víctor Paz Estenssoro announced in a broadcast, "Bolivian people, the work of iniquity has ended. The nation has ceased to be the property of the Peñaranda Rivera Castillo family."[6] Villarroel was allowed to take residence in the Palacio Quemado as de facto president while members of the MNR, including Paz Estenssoro, took various positions in his cabinet. At age 35, he was one of the youngest presidents in Bolivian history.

President (1943–1946) edit

Fight for U.S. recognition edit

According to Bolivian journalist Augusto Céspedes, "The coup surprised no one more in Bolivia than the United States Ambassador." The U.S. government had enjoyed good relations with the Peñaranda administration which had brought Bolivia into World War II as an Allied Power and pledged the country's tin resources to the war effort. The fall of Peñaranda alarmed the State Department which immediately suspended diplomatic relations with Bolivia and refused to recognize the Villarroel government.[7] In 1941, Peñaranda had used the fabricated[8] story of a "Nazi Putsch" in Bolivia to suppress the MNR, causing the U.S. to suspect them of having pro-Nazi affiliations.[9] Villarroel, in turn, was seen as "a Mussolini of the Andes" and a puppet of Buenos Aires. The government of Argentina under the fascist-leaning President Pedro Pablo Ramírez was the only in Latin America to recognize Villarroel.[10]

The newly installed Villarroel government within hours of its assumption to power sought to reassure the U.S. of its desire for good relations and support of the war effort. In an interview, Paz Estenssoro assured that "the new Government does not alter Bolivia's international position at the side of the United Nations."[6] Negotiations over tin sales, vital to the Bolivian economy, rested on recognition by the United States. Hence, Villarroel's government committed to negotiations over the exclusive sale of quinine, the nationalization of German and Japanese companies, and a new tin contract at hopefully higher prices.[10]

Despite their efforts, the view by the U.S. that Villarroel and the MNR were, in fact, a pro-fascist regime resulted in Secretary of State Cordell Hull issuing a memorandum on 10 January describing their pro-Axis sympathies. By 28 January, all 19 American governments (except Argentina) had publicly refused recognition of the Villarroel regime.[11] While on 11 February Villarroel removed three cabinet members including two top MNR leaders, Carlos Montenegro and Augusto Céspedes, the U.S. maintained that the composition of the revolutionary junta precluded recognition and that "it is not felt that these shifts have materially altered the character of the Junta."[12]

Under the mounting weight of U.S. pressure, the remaining MNR ministers, Víctor Paz Estenssoro, Rafael Otazo, and Wálter Guevara resigned on 5 April 1944.[3][12] Gualberto Villarroel received full command from the junta as de facto provisional president.[13] Later that month, Minister of Labor Víctor Andrade publicly denied the charges of Nazism and called on the U.S. to recognize the new government.[14] These events led the U.S. to send Avra M. Warren, U.S. Ambassador to Panama, to La Paz to give advice on recognition. On 23 May, Warren recommended the immediate recognition of the Villarroel government due to the fact that "there is now no MNR official in any position of prominence in Bolivia."[15]

Víctor Paz Estenssoro would later explain that the persistent obstacle to achieving the long-awaited goal of recognition between the two capitals ended up being the MNR's call for a ban on Jewish immigration to the country. While the U.S. saw it as a sign of antisemitism, Paz Estenssoro maintained his party's opposition was due to the "serious problems relating to subsistence and housing" it created.[16] The MNR would return to Villarroel's cabinet, with Víctor Paz Estenssoro as Finance Minister, in late December 1944.

1945 Indigenous Congress edit

 
Villarroel at the opening of the Indigenous Congress, May 1945

Faced with enemies on both the left and right, Villarroel strove to build a base of support among the long marginalized indigenous populace of Bolivia. In November 1944, Villarroel repealed the law prohibiting indigenous people from entering the main squares of La Paz.[17] Not long after, on the initiative of peasant leaders such as Francisco Chipana Ramos, the president agreed to sponsor a fully indigenous congress to be held in early 1945. The government gave credentials to some 1200 community delegates and settlers to attend the congress. Between 10 and 15 May 1945, a combined group of 1500 delegates and their families would hold the First Indigenous Congress in Luna Park in La Paz.[18]

The congress, led by its Aymara president Francisco Chipana and Quechua vice president Dionsio Miranda, would result in important legal reforms among the indigenous community. Namely, the congress brought forth the abolition of the pongueaje, an obligatory form of unpaid servitude by indigenous peasants in haciendas.[18] Also abolished were "personal services" such as domestic service and transporting and selling a landlord's produce which came in addition to cultivating fields. The abolition of pongueaje also saw the end of state authorities illegally including jobs such as mail delivery within the domestic servant system.

The emphasis by the press on the "authentic native" dress, language and rural labor, marked the indigenous peoples as a distinct group within the Bolivian nation.[17] Though he worked closely with Villarroel's government during the congress, Chipana presented the event as controlled by the delegates themselves while sidelining more radical demands for redistribution of the land. Despite this, the conservative landlords refused to accept even Villarroel's moderate changes to the labor regime, but ongoing indigenous peasant mobilization would enforce the new laws.[18]

 
Portrait of Villarroel as president by Luis Walpher, 1954

National Convention of 1944–1945 edit

Villarroel called legislative elections to be held on 2 July 1944 which resulted in a clear victory for the MNR in the Constituent Assembly. In turn, the assembly proclaimed Gualberto Villarroel the constitutional President of the Republic on 5 August 1944.[19] He formally accepted the title the following day. Villarroel enacted a number of far-reaching reforms, including official recognition of worker unions with the establishment of the Federation of Miners, the beginning of construction of the nation's first oil refinery and the establishment of a retirement pension.[20] Villarroel is quoted as once saying "I am not an enemy of the rich but I am more a friend of the poor."[21]

In his push for further reforms, he called a National Convention to rewrite the constitution in 1944. As part of this process, the convention proclaimed Julián Montellano, an MNR member of the Chamber of Deputies from Oruro, vice president on 3 November 1945.[22] Montellano took office three days later. That same month, the new constitution was sanctioned by the National Convention on 23 November and promulgated by Villarroel on 24 November. The Political Constitution of 1945 maintained the same formal structure and even number of sections, denominations, and articles as the 1938 Constitution promulgated during the presidency of Germán Busch, although with the introduction of further reforms.

Attacks on the opposition edit

The conservative backlash against Villarroel did not take long to appear, fed by the considerable resources of the private mining interests. Moreover, the workers themselves decided to exercise their new rights to protest to demand further concessions causing the government to adopt repressive measures to maintain control.

Shooting of José Antonio Arze edit

Allegedly among these repressions was the attempted assassination of José Antonio Arze, a prominent Bolivian sociologist and Marxist and head of the Revolutionary Left Party (PIR). While Arze had initially presented his sympathy for the 1943 coup, he refused to supply the Villarroel regime with civil support from the PIR unless the new government got rid of "fascist" elements. The result of this was his arrest and confinement for a few months after which he was released.[23]

 
Three years after the executions, the newspaper La Razón printed a report on the victims of Chuspipata.

In La Paz in the early morning of 9 July 1944, an unknown assailant shot Arze twice outside his house. While one bullet missed his head by millimeters, the other lodged itself in his thorax, leaving him incapacitated and in hospital for several months. The attempt on the life of the influential leftist politician was a cause of grave concern among academics which, given the previous animosity between the two, suspected government involvement in the incident. In an attempt to push against this notion, a government delegation including Villarroel himself, accompanied by Foreign Minister Enrique Baldivieso, visited Arze at his hospital, showing concern for his health. A subsequent liability trial against the Villarroel regime failed to reach a concrete conclusion as to whether Villarroel or RADEPA had instigated the assassination attempt.[23]

Kidnapping of Moritz Hochschild edit

In the same month as the shooting of José Antonio Arze, was the kidnapping of the prominent tin baron Moritz Hochschild. The mining businessman had been arrested in La Paz after being linked to a series of actions threatening the stability of the government months prior. However, on 30 July 1944, he had been cleared of all charges and released. The same day, he was intercepted by RADEPA agents while attempting to leave the country through the Chilean consulate. Hochschild's whereabouts were unknown for 17 days. The initial decision to eliminate him was reversed due to international pressure and the intervention of diplomatic representatives of Argentina, Chile, and the United States which ultimately secured Hochschild's release on 15 August.[24]

Executions of Chuspipata and Challacollo edit

The harsh repressions on the opposition inevitably resulted in the development of a conspiracy to overthrow the government. The attempted coup in Oruro, headed by Colonel David Ovidio, resulted in failure and its perpetrators were arrested. Following this, the decision was made to impose the maximum penalty of death, without trial and without discretion on the conspirators. On the night of 19 November, four of the conspirators, Miguel Brito, Eduardo Paccieri, Fernando Garrón, and Humberto Loaiza were shot near Challacollo. The rest, two senators: Luis Calvo and Félix Capriles; two former ministers of state: Carlos Salinas Aramayo and Rubén Terrazas; and a military man: General Demetrio Ramos were executed near Chuspipata.[25] The latter executions were particularly brutal as the condemned were shot and their bodies thrown off a 3,000-foot (910 m) ravine.[26] The government announced the executions through a note signed by Major Jorge Eguino on 21 November 1944.

Once the facts were discovered, Villarroel maintained that he had not ordered the executions. However, as head of government, he took responsibility for what happened. Some versions indicate that several crimes carried out during the Villarroel government were carried out by RADEPA, without the knowledge of the president.[26] Whatever the case, the executions shocked the population. In 1977, writer Roberto Querejazu would claim that "if the Catavi massacre was the flag raised by the MNR and the RADEPA in their revolt against Peñaranda, the 'crimes of Challacollo and Chuspipata' became those of the PIR and the traditional parties to drag public opinion against Villarroel."[25]

Overthrow and death edit

 
The last living photo taken of Villarroel presenting his new cabinet, 20 July 1946

The atrocities of Chuspipata and Challacollo contributed to a gradual process of deterioration in the popularity of the government of Gualberto Villarroel, a process accelerated by the violent repression that the regime promoted against members of the opposition and citizens critical of its actions.[27] Dissatisfaction came to a head in July 1946 as a tripartite group of workers, students, and teachers threatened to strike. Their main demand was the adjustment of teachers' wages which at the time sat at a meager $12.50 to $20 a month.[28] Also among their demands was the removal of the MNR from government, and the resignation of the MNR and its head Víctor Paz Estenssoro, who was held responsible for the executions of Chuspipata and Challacollo, from Villarroel's cabinet.[29] The government refused, stating that an increase in wages would cause inflation, this despite the fact that an estimated 56% of the national budget was being spent on the army alone.[27]

On 8 July, teachers and professors of the Higher University of San Andrés (UMSA), joined two days later by university students, went on strike demanding increased wages. The police dispersed the demonstration concentrated in the Plaza Murillo with rifle and machine gun fire, leaving 3 dead and 11 wounded.[30] On 17 July, the windows of the UMSA were found destroyed, having been stoned the night before by drunk MNR members including the minister of agriculture, Julio Zuazo Cuenca. The gesture galvanized university students who organized in La Paz, rallying the city's population to their side. During one of these rallies, Bergel Camberos, a student from the "Pedro Domingo Murillo" Industrial School, was shot by police, heightening the crowd's animosity against the government. In a bid to disperse the growing crowds, President Villarroel brought the "Loa" 4th Infantry Regiment and the Bolívar 2nd Artillery Regiment into the city. The situation quickly devolved with the army clashing with the student protesters, causing 10 casualties. On 19 July, an infantry column descended on La Paz with orders to occupy some corners of the city.[29]

In an attempt to deescalate the situation, Villarroel met with Héctor Ormachea, the rector of the UMSA, and ordered that the students arrested in the clashes be released. That same day, Villarroel requested the resignation of Minister of Agriculture Zuazo and met with Minister of Finance Paz Estenssoro to request the removal of the MNR party from government, facilitating their asylum in foreign embassies. On 20 July, a new all-military cabinet was announced and the commitment of Defense Minister Ángel Rodríguez not to fire on the people was heard on the radio. At 7 p.m., MNR ministers presented their resignation at the government palace.[29]

 
President Gualberto Villarroel is lynched and hanged in Plaza Murillo, 21 July 1946

At 11 p.m., military commanders led by Minister General Rodríguez entered the Palace of Government (the so-called Palacio Quemado) and requested the resignation of President Gualberto Villarroel to avoid a massacre. While some officers loyal to Villarroel implored against such a decision, it was concluded that it would be difficult to maintain the president's situation without the full support of the army, taking into account that many of the troops who were quartered had relatives who had died in previous clashes. Rodríguez would later say that "The president did not expect this coup. His bewilderment was distressing." Finally, President Villarroel agreed to resign with Vice President Montellano as his successor. However, all those present rejected this because Montellano belonged to the MNR, and the people at that time did not want any hint of that party in government.[30]

 
The newspaper Times-Picayune reports on the death of Villarroel, 22 July 1946

At 1:30 p.m. on 21 July, Villarroel drew up his resignation and presented it to General Damaso Arenas, commander-in-chief of the army.[31][32] By that point, however, an easy end to the protests and riots through the president's resignation was no longer possible. Unaware of the president's resignation, anti-government crowds took control of the Plaza Murillo, the site of the Palacio Quemado, laying siege to it. The enraged crowds of teachers, students, and marketplace women seized arms from the arsenal. The revolt spread throughout the city. The jail was attacked and political prisoners released while Max Toledo, Director General of Transit and member of RADEPA, was surprised and killed in the vicinity of Plaza San Pedro. His body was one of many to be hung in the square, inspired by the hanging and desecration of the corpse of Benito Mussolini the year prior.[33] As suspected, military units eventually stopped defending the regime. Rather, soldiers of the "Loa" 4th Infantry Regiment joined the insurrection.[30]

The rioters eventually stormed the Palacio Quemado itself in search of Villarroel. He was discovered in a cupboard in the Office of Administrative Reorganization and Efficiency. There are several accounts of what happened next: One claims that one of the revolutionaries fired his submachine gun through the closed cupboard door upon hearing a noise and discovered the mortally wounded body of Villarroel when he opened it. Another alleges that Villarroel opened the cupboard himself and fired his revolver at his attackers before falling riddled with gunshots. A third version says that when discovered he exclaimed: "I am not Villarroel, I am Alfredo Mendizábal, head of the PIR (one of the leaders of the revolution)."[30]

Whatever the case, Villarroel died within the Palacio Quemado and his body was thrown through a window onto Ayacucho Street in the Plaza Murillo. Villarroel was then lynched in the street, his clothes torn and his mutilated, almost naked corpse hung on a lamp post. The same fates were found within the vicinity of the surrounding streets by Captain Waldo Ballivián, the president's secretary Luis Uría de la Oliva, and the journalist Roberto Hinojosa. Following the bloody events of 21 July, Tomás Monje, the President of the Superior District Court of the judicial district of La Paz, was appointed by the opposition to temporarily take command as part of an interim junta. As Monje was ill, Néstor Guillén, Dean of the District Court, took provisional command.[34]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Office abolished until November 1945.
  2. ^ Razón de Patria, or Fatherland's Cause (RADEPA), while not a political party, was a military faction of young officers inspired by the Military Socialist governments of David Toro and Germán Busch.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "NACIMIENTO, VIDA Y COLGAMIENTO DE GUALBERTO VILLARROEL LÓPEZ | Historias de Bolivia". NACIMIENTO, VIDA Y COLGAMIENTO DE GUALBERTO VILLARROEL LÓPEZ | Historias de Bolivia. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Gualberto Villarroel (1908-1946)". www.educa.com.bo (in Spanish). 19 November 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Bolivia - The Rise of New Political Groups". countrystudies.us. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  4. ^ "El Golpe de Estado de 1943". www.educa.com.bo (in Spanish). 19 November 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Golpe de Estado de 1943 / 20 de Diciembre de 1943 .: Un día en la historia de Bolivia". www.historia.com.bo. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  6. ^ a b "COUP D'ETAT IN BOLIVIA". Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995). 22 December 1943. p. 1. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  7. ^ Archondo, Rafael (25 June 2020). "Villarroel y los gringos". digital-media (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  8. ^ Blasier, pp. 39
  9. ^ Blasier, pp. 32
  10. ^ a b Blasier, pp. 40
  11. ^ Blasier, pp. 42
  12. ^ a b Gisbert 2003, pp. 346–347
  13. ^ "DECRETO LEY No 84 del 05 de Abril de 1944 » Derechoteca.com". www.derechoteca.com. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  14. ^ "P. 9". New York Times. 20 April 1944.
  15. ^ Blasier, pp. 43
  16. ^ Estenssoro 1955, pp. 222–223
  17. ^ a b Shesko, Elizabeth. "Hijos del inca y de la patria: Representaciones del indígena durante el congreso indigenal de 1945". Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  18. ^ a b c Ramos, Francisco Chipana (6 July 2018). "The Death of Servitude". The Bolivia Reader. pp. 365–370. doi:10.1215/9780822371618-082. ISBN 978-0-8223-7161-8.
  19. ^ "Bolivia: Ley de 5 de agosto de 1944". www.lexivox.org. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  20. ^ "El sino de Gualberto Villarroel". www.eldiario.net (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  21. ^ "'No soy enemigo de los ricos pero sí, más amigo de los pobres' | EL TERRITORIO noticias de Misiones". El Territorio (in Spanish). Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  22. ^ "Bolivia: Ley de 3 de noviembre de 1945". www.lexivox.org. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  23. ^ a b "Dos disparos en la obscuridad: intento de asesinato de un líder". Urgentebo (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  24. ^ Digital, Recordando el secuestro del industrial minero Mauricio Hochschild | Brújula; Digital, Brujula. "Recordando el secuestro del industrial minero Mauricio Hochschild". brujuladigital.net (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  25. ^ a b "21/11/1944". www.paginasiete.bo (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  26. ^ a b "Historia de Bolivia: 1934-1952, dieciocho años de transformación". Historias de vida (in Spanish). 12 May 2020. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  27. ^ a b "Bolivia │ Así cayó Villarroel: Miradas de la revuelta del 21 de julio de 1946". Capucha Informativa (in Spanish). 22 July 2020. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  28. ^ "Diary of a Successful Revolution" (PDF). The Foreign Service Journal: 22. 21 July 1946.
  29. ^ a b c Fulgor.com, El (19 July 2020). . El Fulgor (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 27 January 2021. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  30. ^ a b c d capuchainformativa_ecmn0t (22 July 2020). "Bolivia │ Así cayó Villarroel: Miradas de la revuelta del 21 de julio de 1946". Capucha Informativa (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  31. ^ Gisbert 2003, pp. 247
  32. ^ "El sino de Gualberto Villarroel". www.eldiario.net (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  33. ^ Scheina, Robert L. Latin America's Wars: The Age of the Caudillo, 1791-1899, p.209. Brassey's (2003), ISBN 1-57488-452-2
  34. ^ "Bolivia - 1947 -70 años- A la sombra de los colgados: La ascensión presidencial de Hertzog y Urriolagoitia – El principio del fin del viejo orden". Oxígeno Digital (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 November 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Blasier, Cole. The United States, Germany, and the Bolivian Revolutionaries (1941-1946).
  • Estenssoro, Víctor Paz (1955). Discursos parlamentarios (in Spanish). Editorial Canata.
  • Gisbert, Carlos D. Mesa (2003). Presidentes de Bolivia: entre urnas y fusiles : el poder ejecutivo, los ministros de estado (in Spanish). Editorial Gisbert.

Further reading edit

  • Céspedes, Augusto (1975). El presidente colgado (in Spanish). Editorial Universitaria de Buenos Aires.

External links edit

  • Death of Gualberto Villarroel, 22 July 1946 edition of Clarín (in Spanish).
Political offices
Preceded by President of Bolivia
1943–1946
Succeeded by

gualberto, villarroel, bolivian, province, province, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, villarroel, second, maternal, family, name, lópez, lópez, december, 1908, july, 1946, bolivian, military, officer, served, 39th, president, bolivia, from, 1943,. For the Bolivian province see Gualberto Villarroel Province In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Villarroel and the second or maternal family name is Lopez Gualberto Villarroel Lopez 15 December 1908 21 July 1946 was a Bolivian military officer who served as the 39th president of Bolivia from 1943 to 1946 A reformist sometimes compared with Argentina s Juan Peron he is nonetheless remembered for his alleged fascist sympathies and his violent demise on 21 July 1946 Gualberto Villarroel39th President of BoliviaIn office 20 December 1943 21 July 1946Provisional 5 April 1944 6 August 1944 Junta 20 December 1943 5 April 1944Vice PresidentNone 1943 1945 a Julian Montellano 1945 1946 Preceded byEnrique PenarandaSucceeded byNestor GuillenPersonal detailsBornGualberto Villarroel Lopez 1908 12 15 15 December 1908Villa Rivero Cochabamba BoliviaDied21 July 1946 1946 07 21 aged 37 La Paz BoliviaCause of deathLynch mobPolitical partyRADEPA b SpouseElena LopezChildren2Parent s Enrique Casto VillarroelMaria LopezEducationMilitary College of the ArmySignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceBoliviaBranch serviceBolivian ArmyYears of service1925 1935RankColonelUnitPerez Tercero Infantry Regiment8th Ayacucho Infantry RegimentBattles warsChaco WarAwardsOrder of the Condor of the Andes Order of Abdon Calderon Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Chaco War 2 1943 coup d etat 3 President 1943 1946 3 1 Fight for U S recognition 3 2 1945 Indigenous Congress 3 3 National Convention of 1944 1945 3 4 Attacks on the opposition 3 4 1 Shooting of Jose Antonio Arze 3 4 2 Kidnapping of Moritz Hochschild 3 4 3 Executions of Chuspipata and Challacollo 4 Overthrow and death 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 6 3 Bibliography 6 4 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life editGualberto Villarroel was born on 15 December 1908 in Villa Rivero Cochabamba Department He was the son of Enrique Casto Villarroel and Maria Lopez At age 11 Villarroel s parents decided that provincial education was insufficient and enrolled him fiscal school and later into the Sucre National School in Cochabamba 1 He graduated in 1924 going on to enroll in the Military College of the Army in 1925 graduating with the rank of second lieutenant as part of the Perez Tercero Infantry Regiment in 1928 A distinguished cadet he was awarded the Order of Abdon Calderon for best student by the Ecuadorian government 1 In 1931 he rose to the rank of lieutenant Chaco War edit Further information Chaco WarVillarroel saw action in the Chaco War 1932 35 against Paraguay He caught the attention of Hans Kundt commander in chief of the army who highlighted the young man s creativity in combat As part of the 8th Ayacucho Infantry Regiment he participated in the battles of Canada Strongest and Ybybobo being promoted to captain in 1935 2 He also participated in the final defense of Villamontes in 1935 After Bolivia s disastrous defeat in the conflict he became convinced that the country needed profound structural changes and supported the progressive Military Socialist regimes of David Toro and German Busch Following Busch s suicide in August 1939 conservative forces reasserted themselves took power and won the 1940 elections in which the traditional parties linked to the country s big mining interests triumphed at the polls with General Enrique Penaranda 1943 coup d etat editWhile the Penaranda administration had managed to wrest control of government from the previous progressive political forces it was unable to stop their spread Villarroel became a member of RADEPA Razon de Patria or Fatherland s Cause an open military faction of young officers founded in 1934 by Bolivian prisoners of war in Paraguay It sought mass support backed military intervention in politics and hoped to prevent excessive foreign control over Bolivia s natural resources 3 Between September and December 1943 RADEPA secretly conspired with the newly formed Revolutionary Nationalist Movement MNR to overthrow Penaranda The consequences of the Catavi massacre on 21 December 1942 which caused the deaths of 19 striking miners would ultimately bring down the government 4 Before the coup opposition leaders requested that the president resign Penaranda in turn evaded a response and ordered the immediate change of military assignments for the RADEPA leaders thus removing them from the center of conflict In response the date of the coup was brought forward 5 On 20 December 1943 the RADEPA MNR alliance overthrew the government Former economy minister Victor Paz Estenssoro announced in a broadcast Bolivian people the work of iniquity has ended The nation has ceased to be the property of the Penaranda Rivera Castillo family 6 Villarroel was allowed to take residence in the Palacio Quemado as de facto president while members of the MNR including Paz Estenssoro took various positions in his cabinet At age 35 he was one of the youngest presidents in Bolivian history President 1943 1946 editFight for U S recognition edit See also Government Junta of Bolivia 1943 1944 According to Bolivian journalist Augusto Cespedes The coup surprised no one more in Bolivia than the United States Ambassador The U S government had enjoyed good relations with the Penaranda administration which had brought Bolivia into World War II as an Allied Power and pledged the country s tin resources to the war effort The fall of Penaranda alarmed the State Department which immediately suspended diplomatic relations with Bolivia and refused to recognize the Villarroel government 7 In 1941 Penaranda had used the fabricated 8 story of a Nazi Putsch in Bolivia to suppress the MNR causing the U S to suspect them of having pro Nazi affiliations 9 Villarroel in turn was seen as a Mussolini of the Andes and a puppet of Buenos Aires The government of Argentina under the fascist leaning President Pedro Pablo Ramirez was the only in Latin America to recognize Villarroel 10 The newly installed Villarroel government within hours of its assumption to power sought to reassure the U S of its desire for good relations and support of the war effort In an interview Paz Estenssoro assured that the new Government does not alter Bolivia s international position at the side of the United Nations 6 Negotiations over tin sales vital to the Bolivian economy rested on recognition by the United States Hence Villarroel s government committed to negotiations over the exclusive sale of quinine the nationalization of German and Japanese companies and a new tin contract at hopefully higher prices 10 Despite their efforts the view by the U S that Villarroel and the MNR were in fact a pro fascist regime resulted in Secretary of State Cordell Hull issuing a memorandum on 10 January describing their pro Axis sympathies By 28 January all 19 American governments except Argentina had publicly refused recognition of the Villarroel regime 11 While on 11 February Villarroel removed three cabinet members including two top MNR leaders Carlos Montenegro and Augusto Cespedes the U S maintained that the composition of the revolutionary junta precluded recognition and that it is not felt that these shifts have materially altered the character of the Junta 12 Under the mounting weight of U S pressure the remaining MNR ministers Victor Paz Estenssoro Rafael Otazo and Walter Guevara resigned on 5 April 1944 3 12 Gualberto Villarroel received full command from the junta as de facto provisional president 13 Later that month Minister of Labor Victor Andrade publicly denied the charges of Nazism and called on the U S to recognize the new government 14 These events led the U S to send Avra M Warren U S Ambassador to Panama to La Paz to give advice on recognition On 23 May Warren recommended the immediate recognition of the Villarroel government due to the fact that there is now no MNR official in any position of prominence in Bolivia 15 Victor Paz Estenssoro would later explain that the persistent obstacle to achieving the long awaited goal of recognition between the two capitals ended up being the MNR s call for a ban on Jewish immigration to the country While the U S saw it as a sign of antisemitism Paz Estenssoro maintained his party s opposition was due to the serious problems relating to subsistence and housing it created 16 The MNR would return to Villarroel s cabinet with Victor Paz Estenssoro as Finance Minister in late December 1944 1945 Indigenous Congress edit nbsp Villarroel at the opening of the Indigenous Congress May 1945Faced with enemies on both the left and right Villarroel strove to build a base of support among the long marginalized indigenous populace of Bolivia In November 1944 Villarroel repealed the law prohibiting indigenous people from entering the main squares of La Paz 17 Not long after on the initiative of peasant leaders such as Francisco Chipana Ramos the president agreed to sponsor a fully indigenous congress to be held in early 1945 The government gave credentials to some 1200 community delegates and settlers to attend the congress Between 10 and 15 May 1945 a combined group of 1500 delegates and their families would hold the First Indigenous Congress in Luna Park in La Paz 18 The congress led by its Aymara president Francisco Chipana and Quechua vice president Dionsio Miranda would result in important legal reforms among the indigenous community Namely the congress brought forth the abolition of the pongueaje an obligatory form of unpaid servitude by indigenous peasants in haciendas 18 Also abolished were personal services such as domestic service and transporting and selling a landlord s produce which came in addition to cultivating fields The abolition of pongueaje also saw the end of state authorities illegally including jobs such as mail delivery within the domestic servant system The emphasis by the press on the authentic native dress language and rural labor marked the indigenous peoples as a distinct group within the Bolivian nation 17 Though he worked closely with Villarroel s government during the congress Chipana presented the event as controlled by the delegates themselves while sidelining more radical demands for redistribution of the land Despite this the conservative landlords refused to accept even Villarroel s moderate changes to the labor regime but ongoing indigenous peasant mobilization would enforce the new laws 18 nbsp Portrait of Villarroel as president by Luis Walpher 1954National Convention of 1944 1945 edit Main article Bolivian Constituent Assembly 1944 1946 Villarroel called legislative elections to be held on 2 July 1944 which resulted in a clear victory for the MNR in the Constituent Assembly In turn the assembly proclaimed Gualberto Villarroel the constitutional President of the Republic on 5 August 1944 19 He formally accepted the title the following day Villarroel enacted a number of far reaching reforms including official recognition of worker unions with the establishment of the Federation of Miners the beginning of construction of the nation s first oil refinery and the establishment of a retirement pension 20 Villarroel is quoted as once saying I am not an enemy of the rich but I am more a friend of the poor 21 In his push for further reforms he called a National Convention to rewrite the constitution in 1944 As part of this process the convention proclaimed Julian Montellano an MNR member of the Chamber of Deputies from Oruro vice president on 3 November 1945 22 Montellano took office three days later That same month the new constitution was sanctioned by the National Convention on 23 November and promulgated by Villarroel on 24 November The Political Constitution of 1945 maintained the same formal structure and even number of sections denominations and articles as the 1938 Constitution promulgated during the presidency of German Busch although with the introduction of further reforms Attacks on the opposition edit The conservative backlash against Villarroel did not take long to appear fed by the considerable resources of the private mining interests Moreover the workers themselves decided to exercise their new rights to protest to demand further concessions causing the government to adopt repressive measures to maintain control Shooting of Jose Antonio Arze edit Allegedly among these repressions was the attempted assassination of Jose Antonio Arze a prominent Bolivian sociologist and Marxist and head of the Revolutionary Left Party PIR While Arze had initially presented his sympathy for the 1943 coup he refused to supply the Villarroel regime with civil support from the PIR unless the new government got rid of fascist elements The result of this was his arrest and confinement for a few months after which he was released 23 nbsp Three years after the executions the newspaper La Razon printed a report on the victims of Chuspipata In La Paz in the early morning of 9 July 1944 an unknown assailant shot Arze twice outside his house While one bullet missed his head by millimeters the other lodged itself in his thorax leaving him incapacitated and in hospital for several months The attempt on the life of the influential leftist politician was a cause of grave concern among academics which given the previous animosity between the two suspected government involvement in the incident In an attempt to push against this notion a government delegation including Villarroel himself accompanied by Foreign Minister Enrique Baldivieso visited Arze at his hospital showing concern for his health A subsequent liability trial against the Villarroel regime failed to reach a concrete conclusion as to whether Villarroel or RADEPA had instigated the assassination attempt 23 Kidnapping of Moritz Hochschild edit In the same month as the shooting of Jose Antonio Arze was the kidnapping of the prominent tin baron Moritz Hochschild The mining businessman had been arrested in La Paz after being linked to a series of actions threatening the stability of the government months prior However on 30 July 1944 he had been cleared of all charges and released The same day he was intercepted by RADEPA agents while attempting to leave the country through the Chilean consulate Hochschild s whereabouts were unknown for 17 days The initial decision to eliminate him was reversed due to international pressure and the intervention of diplomatic representatives of Argentina Chile and the United States which ultimately secured Hochschild s release on 15 August 24 Executions of Chuspipata and Challacollo edit The harsh repressions on the opposition inevitably resulted in the development of a conspiracy to overthrow the government The attempted coup in Oruro headed by Colonel David Ovidio resulted in failure and its perpetrators were arrested Following this the decision was made to impose the maximum penalty of death without trial and without discretion on the conspirators On the night of 19 November four of the conspirators Miguel Brito Eduardo Paccieri Fernando Garron and Humberto Loaiza were shot near Challacollo The rest two senators Luis Calvo and Felix Capriles two former ministers of state Carlos Salinas Aramayo and Ruben Terrazas and a military man General Demetrio Ramos were executed near Chuspipata 25 The latter executions were particularly brutal as the condemned were shot and their bodies thrown off a 3 000 foot 910 m ravine 26 The government announced the executions through a note signed by Major Jorge Eguino on 21 November 1944 Once the facts were discovered Villarroel maintained that he had not ordered the executions However as head of government he took responsibility for what happened Some versions indicate that several crimes carried out during the Villarroel government were carried out by RADEPA without the knowledge of the president 26 Whatever the case the executions shocked the population In 1977 writer Roberto Querejazu would claim that if the Catavi massacre was the flag raised by the MNR and the RADEPA in their revolt against Penaranda the crimes of Challacollo and Chuspipata became those of the PIR and the traditional parties to drag public opinion against Villarroel 25 Overthrow and death editMain article 1946 La Paz riots nbsp The last living photo taken of Villarroel presenting his new cabinet 20 July 1946The atrocities of Chuspipata and Challacollo contributed to a gradual process of deterioration in the popularity of the government of Gualberto Villarroel a process accelerated by the violent repression that the regime promoted against members of the opposition and citizens critical of its actions 27 Dissatisfaction came to a head in July 1946 as a tripartite group of workers students and teachers threatened to strike Their main demand was the adjustment of teachers wages which at the time sat at a meager 12 50 to 20 a month 28 Also among their demands was the removal of the MNR from government and the resignation of the MNR and its head Victor Paz Estenssoro who was held responsible for the executions of Chuspipata and Challacollo from Villarroel s cabinet 29 The government refused stating that an increase in wages would cause inflation this despite the fact that an estimated 56 of the national budget was being spent on the army alone 27 On 8 July teachers and professors of the Higher University of San Andres UMSA joined two days later by university students went on strike demanding increased wages The police dispersed the demonstration concentrated in the Plaza Murillo with rifle and machine gun fire leaving 3 dead and 11 wounded 30 On 17 July the windows of the UMSA were found destroyed having been stoned the night before by drunk MNR members including the minister of agriculture Julio Zuazo Cuenca The gesture galvanized university students who organized in La Paz rallying the city s population to their side During one of these rallies Bergel Camberos a student from the Pedro Domingo Murillo Industrial School was shot by police heightening the crowd s animosity against the government In a bid to disperse the growing crowds President Villarroel brought the Loa 4th Infantry Regiment and the Bolivar 2nd Artillery Regiment into the city The situation quickly devolved with the army clashing with the student protesters causing 10 casualties On 19 July an infantry column descended on La Paz with orders to occupy some corners of the city 29 In an attempt to deescalate the situation Villarroel met with Hector Ormachea the rector of the UMSA and ordered that the students arrested in the clashes be released That same day Villarroel requested the resignation of Minister of Agriculture Zuazo and met with Minister of Finance Paz Estenssoro to request the removal of the MNR party from government facilitating their asylum in foreign embassies On 20 July a new all military cabinet was announced and the commitment of Defense Minister Angel Rodriguez not to fire on the people was heard on the radio At 7 p m MNR ministers presented their resignation at the government palace 29 nbsp President Gualberto Villarroel is lynched and hanged in Plaza Murillo 21 July 1946At 11 p m military commanders led by Minister General Rodriguez entered the Palace of Government the so called Palacio Quemado and requested the resignation of President Gualberto Villarroel to avoid a massacre While some officers loyal to Villarroel implored against such a decision it was concluded that it would be difficult to maintain the president s situation without the full support of the army taking into account that many of the troops who were quartered had relatives who had died in previous clashes Rodriguez would later say that The president did not expect this coup His bewilderment was distressing Finally President Villarroel agreed to resign with Vice President Montellano as his successor However all those present rejected this because Montellano belonged to the MNR and the people at that time did not want any hint of that party in government 30 nbsp The newspaper Times Picayune reports on the death of Villarroel 22 July 1946At 1 30 p m on 21 July Villarroel drew up his resignation and presented it to General Damaso Arenas commander in chief of the army 31 32 By that point however an easy end to the protests and riots through the president s resignation was no longer possible Unaware of the president s resignation anti government crowds took control of the Plaza Murillo the site of the Palacio Quemado laying siege to it The enraged crowds of teachers students and marketplace women seized arms from the arsenal The revolt spread throughout the city The jail was attacked and political prisoners released while Max Toledo Director General of Transit and member of RADEPA was surprised and killed in the vicinity of Plaza San Pedro His body was one of many to be hung in the square inspired by the hanging and desecration of the corpse of Benito Mussolini the year prior 33 As suspected military units eventually stopped defending the regime Rather soldiers of the Loa 4th Infantry Regiment joined the insurrection 30 The rioters eventually stormed the Palacio Quemado itself in search of Villarroel He was discovered in a cupboard in the Office of Administrative Reorganization and Efficiency There are several accounts of what happened next One claims that one of the revolutionaries fired his submachine gun through the closed cupboard door upon hearing a noise and discovered the mortally wounded body of Villarroel when he opened it Another alleges that Villarroel opened the cupboard himself and fired his revolver at his attackers before falling riddled with gunshots A third version says that when discovered he exclaimed I am not Villarroel I am Alfredo Mendizabal head of the PIR one of the leaders of the revolution 30 Whatever the case Villarroel died within the Palacio Quemado and his body was thrown through a window onto Ayacucho Street in the Plaza Murillo Villarroel was then lynched in the street his clothes torn and his mutilated almost naked corpse hung on a lamp post The same fates were found within the vicinity of the surrounding streets by Captain Waldo Ballivian the president s secretary Luis Uria de la Oliva and the journalist Roberto Hinojosa Following the bloody events of 21 July Tomas Monje the President of the Superior District Court of the judicial district of La Paz was appointed by the opposition to temporarily take command as part of an interim junta As Monje was ill Nestor Guillen Dean of the District Court took provisional command 34 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Bolivia portalCabinet of Gualberto Villarroel Government Junta of Bolivia 1943 1944 References editNotes edit Office abolished until November 1945 Razon de Patria or Fatherland s Cause RADEPA while not a political party was a military faction of young officers inspired by the Military Socialist governments of David Toro and German Busch References edit a b NACIMIENTO VIDA Y COLGAMIENTO DE GUALBERTO VILLARROEL LoPEZ Historias de Bolivia NACIMIENTO VIDA Y COLGAMIENTO DE GUALBERTO VILLARROEL LoPEZ Historias de Bolivia Retrieved 27 November 2020 Gualberto Villarroel 1908 1946 www educa com bo in Spanish 19 November 2014 Retrieved 27 November 2020 a b Bolivia The Rise of New Political Groups countrystudies us Retrieved 27 November 2020 El Golpe de Estado de 1943 www educa com bo in Spanish 19 November 2014 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Golpe de Estado de 1943 20 de Diciembre de 1943 Un dia en la historia de Bolivia www historia com bo Retrieved 27 November 2020 a b COUP D ETAT IN BOLIVIA Canberra Times ACT 1926 1995 22 December 1943 p 1 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Archondo Rafael 25 June 2020 Villarroel y los gringos digital media in Spanish Retrieved 27 November 2020 Blasier pp 39 Blasier pp 32 a b Blasier pp 40 Blasier pp 42 a b Gisbert 2003 pp 346 347 DECRETO LEY No 84 del 05 de Abril de 1944 Derechoteca com www derechoteca com Retrieved 28 November 2020 P 9 New York Times 20 April 1944 Blasier pp 43 Estenssoro 1955 pp 222 223 a b Shesko Elizabeth Hijos del inca y de la patria Representaciones del indigena durante el congreso indigenal de 1945 Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b c Ramos Francisco Chipana 6 July 2018 The Death of Servitude The Bolivia Reader pp 365 370 doi 10 1215 9780822371618 082 ISBN 978 0 8223 7161 8 Bolivia Ley de 5 de agosto de 1944 www lexivox org Retrieved 28 November 2020 El sino de Gualberto Villarroel www eldiario net in Spanish Retrieved 28 November 2020 No soy enemigo de los ricos pero si mas amigo de los pobres EL TERRITORIO noticias de Misiones El Territorio in Spanish Retrieved 7 June 2021 Bolivia Ley de 3 de noviembre de 1945 www lexivox org Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b Dos disparos en la obscuridad intento de asesinato de un lider Urgentebo in Spanish Retrieved 28 November 2020 Digital Recordando el secuestro del industrial minero Mauricio Hochschild Brujula Digital Brujula Recordando el secuestro del industrial minero Mauricio Hochschild brujuladigital net in Spanish Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b 21 11 1944 www paginasiete bo in Spanish Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b Historia de Bolivia 1934 1952 dieciocho anos de transformacion Historias de vida in Spanish 12 May 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b Bolivia Asi cayo Villarroel Miradas de la revuelta del 21 de julio de 1946 Capucha Informativa in Spanish 22 July 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Diary of a Successful Revolution PDF The Foreign Service Journal 22 21 July 1946 a b c Fulgor com El 19 July 2020 Las ultimas horas del Gobierno de Gualberto Villarroel El Fulgor in Spanish Archived from the original on 27 January 2021 Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b c d capuchainformativa ecmn0t 22 July 2020 Bolivia Asi cayo Villarroel Miradas de la revuelta del 21 de julio de 1946 Capucha Informativa in Spanish Retrieved 28 November 2020 Gisbert 2003 pp 247 El sino de Gualberto Villarroel www eldiario net in Spanish Retrieved 30 May 2021 Scheina Robert L Latin America s Wars The Age of the Caudillo 1791 1899 p 209 Brassey s 2003 ISBN 1 57488 452 2 Bolivia 1947 70 anos A la sombra de los colgados La ascension presidencial de Hertzog y Urriolagoitia El principio del fin del viejo orden Oxigeno Digital in Spanish Retrieved 28 November 2020 Bibliography edit Blasier Cole The United States Germany and the Bolivian Revolutionaries 1941 1946 Estenssoro Victor Paz 1955 Discursos parlamentarios in Spanish Editorial Canata Gisbert Carlos D Mesa 2003 Presidentes de Bolivia entre urnas y fusiles el poder ejecutivo los ministros de estado in Spanish Editorial Gisbert Further reading edit Cespedes Augusto 1975 El presidente colgado in Spanish Editorial Universitaria de Buenos Aires External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gualberto Villarroel Death of Gualberto Villarroel 22 July 1946 edition of Clarin in Spanish Political officesPreceded byEnrique Penaranda President of Bolivia1943 1946 Succeeded byNestor Guillen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gualberto 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