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Higinio Morínigo

Higinio Nicolás Morínigo Martínez (11 January 1897 – 27 January 1983) was a Paraguayan military officer and politician who served as the 35th president of Paraguay from 1940 to 1948, ruling as a military dictator.[1]

Higinio Morínigo
Portrait, c. 1946
35th President of Paraguay
In office
September 7, 1940 – June 3, 1948
Preceded byJosé Félix Estigarribia
Succeeded byJuan Manuel Frutos
Minister of War and Navy of Paraguay
In office
May 17, 1940 – September 7, 1940
Preceded byEduardo Torreani Viera
Succeeded byPaulino Ántola
Minister of the Interior of Paraguay
In office
January 25, 1939 – August 15, 1939
Preceded byArturo Bray
Succeeded byNicolás Delgado
Personal details
Born
Higinio Nicolás Morínigo Martínez

January 11, 1897
Paraguarí, Paraguay
DiedJanuary 27, 1983(1983-01-27) (aged 86)
Asunción, Paraguay
Political partyNone
SpouseDolores Ferrari (1932–1983)
ChildrenHiginio Emilio, Juan Alberto, Guillermo Gerardo
Military service
Rank Major General (1940)

Born to a mestizo family, Morínigo pursued a military career, serving as a prominent officer of the Paraguayan Army during the Chaco War. After the war he served in the cabinet of liberal President Félix Paiva. In May 1940, Morínigo was appointed Minister of War by President José Félix Estigarribia. After Estigarribia's death on 7 September, Morínigo succeeded him as acting president.

Due to the new constitution enacted by Estigarribia shortly before his death, which gave immense power to the president, Morínigo was able to establish a military dictatorship. In 1943, after three years serving as acting president, Morínigo was elected to a full term, having ran unopposed as all political parties were banned.

He was overthrown and was forced to resign in 1948 due to suspicions that he wanted to perpetuate himself in power, despite Juan Natalicio González being chosen as his successor, he was replaced by then President of the Supreme Court of Justice Juan Manuel Frutos as Provisional President.[2]

Early life and military career edit

Higinio Nicolás Morínigo Martínez was born on 11 January 1897 in Paraguarí, Paraguarí Department, to a mestizo family of merchants. He grew up speaking both Spanish and Guarani.

He attended military college and entered the Paraguayan Army in 1922. He participated in the Chaco War and was appointed the Army's Chief of Staff in 1936. Morínigo gained fame in Paraguay during the February Revolution of 1936 by heading an expedition to the site of the Battle of Cerro Corá to retrieve the remains of Francisco Solano López. President José Félix Estigarribia, himself a Chaco War hero and supporter of the Liberal Party, promoted Morínigo to general and appointed him as Minister of War on May 2, 1940.

After Estigarribia's unexpected death in an airplane crash on September 7, Morínigo was chosen by the army and Liberal ministers as interim President for the two-month period leading to new Presidential elections.[3]

Dictatorship (1940-1948) edit

On September 30, 1940, after growing disagreements with the President, the Liberal ministers resigned from the government. On October 16 Morínigo announced that the Presidential elections would be postponed for two years. Soon afterward he announced a policy of "discipline, hierarchy and order" (disciplina, jerarquia, y orden) and stated that persons who spread subversive ideas would be "subject to confinement".[4]

On November 30, Morínigo banned all political parties and assumed dictatorial powers under a state of siege. In a midday radio address announcing these measures, Morínigo declared, "The people and the Army from this moment will be under a single command." In his self-coup and subsequent rule, he was greatly assisted by the 1940 Constitution, a severely authoritarian document written by the Liberals and Estigarribia that gave the president sweeping executive powers.

To strengthen his authority, on February 4, 1941, Morínigo removed the influential Colonel Peredes from the post of interior minister. On April 17, 1941, he suppressed a febrerista uprising by supporters of the February Revolution.[5]

On April 25, 1942, he banned the Liberal Party, accusing them of conspiring with the Bolivians and exiled Party's leaders.[6] Morínigo's only remaining supporters were radicals from the Colorado Party and the Army. During his dictatorship he faced widespread resistance, including general strikes and military revolts, but he survived by maintaining the loyalty of the Paraguayan Army, which received 45% of the country's budget.

Morínigo relied on the right-wing Colorado faction Guión Rojo (the "Red Banner"), led by Juan Natalico Gonzalez, as a paramilitary police force to intimidate febreristas and Liberals. Opposition newspapers were shut down and publishers exiled.[7]

Morínigo finally held presidential elections on February 15, 1943; he was the sole candidate.[8]

Pro-fascist sympathies edit

Just as in other South American countries, pro-Nazi and pro-fascist sympathies at this time were quite strong in the society and among military officers. After it entered World War II in 1941, the United States tried to exert some pressure on Morínigo to limit the influence of Axis supporters. He kept Paraguay neutral for most of the war. He only officially declared war against the Axis in February 1945, without sending any soldiers to fight.

A surge of German influence in the region and Argentina's pro-Axis leanings alarmed the United States, which sought to wean Paraguay away from German and Argentine influence. At the same time, the United States sought to enhance its presence in the region and pursued close cooperation with Brazil, Argentina's traditional rival. To this end, the United States provided to Paraguay sizable amounts of funds and supplies under the Lend-Lease Agreement, provided loans for public works, and gave technical assistance in agriculture and health care. The United States Department of State approved of closer ties between Brazil and Paraguay and especially supported Brazil's offer to finance a road project designed to reduce Paraguay's dependence on Argentina.

United States protests over German and Argentine activities in Paraguay fell on deaf ears. While the United States defined its interests in terms of resisting the fascist threat, Paraguayan officials believed their best interests lay in economic expediency and were reluctant to antagonize Germany until the outcome of the war was no longer in doubt. Many Paraguayans believed Germany was no more of a threat to Paraguay's sovereignty than the United States.

Much to the displeasure of the United States and Britain, Morínigo refused to act against German economic and diplomatic interests until the very end of the war. German agents had successfully converted many Paraguayans to the Axis cause. South America's first Nazi Party branch had been founded in Paraguay in 1931. German immigrant schools, churches, hospitals, farmers' cooperatives, youth groups, and charitable societies became active Axis backers. All of those organizations prominently displayed swastikas and portraits of Adolf Hitler.

Morínigo's regime was pro-Axis. Large numbers of Paraguayan military officers and government officials were openly sympathetic to the Axis. Among these officials was the national police chief, who named his son Adolfo Hirohito after the best-known Axis leaders. By 1941, the official newspaper El País had adopted an overtly pro-German stance. At the same time, the government strictly controlled pro-Allied labor unions. Police cadets wore swastikas and Italian insignia on their uniforms.

The December 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Germany's declaration of war against the United States gave the United States the leverage it needed, however, to force Morínigo to commit himself publicly to the Allied cause. Morínigo officially severed diplomatic relations with the Axis countries in 1942, although he did not declare war against Germany until February 1945. Nonetheless, Morínigo continued to maintain close relations with the heavily German-influenced Argentine military throughout the war and provided a haven for Axis spies and agents.

The outbreak of World War II eased Morínigo's task of ruling Paraguay while keeping the army happy, because it stimulated demand for Paraguayan export products, such as meat, hides, and cotton, and boosted the country's export earnings. More important, United States policy toward Latin America at this time made Paraguay eligible for major economic assistance. Paraguay received American financial help which was used for improving roads and other infrastructure projects.

Postwar liberalization edit

Pressure from the US for democratization swept South America after the war. On June 9, 1946, Morínigo dismissed Colonel Benitez Vera, the right-wing head of the army, and crushed a short uprising by Vera's supporters. He then created a civilian coalition government formed by Colorado Party members and leftist febreristas, followers of former dictator Rafael Franco and allowed some political freedoms, going so far as legalizing the Paraguayan Communist Party.[9] Despite all this, in September 1946 he ordered suppression of opposition groups and used the Red Banner paramilitary group to attack the office of the Liberal newspaper El País.

Civil war of 1947 edit

Feeling that Morínigo was favouring the right-wing Colorados, the febreristas made common cause with the Liberal Party and the Communist Party in the Civil War of 1947.

The relaxation of the dictatorship was used by political parties to assert their influence in state institutions. In January 1947 officers loyal to the Colorado Party gained control of the army, and on January 11 febreristas quit the government and called on the army to overthrow Morínigo, who responded by declaring a state of siege and arresting febreristas, Liberals and Communists.[10]

On March 7 a bloody civil war started. Despite the fact that 80% of soldiers and 90% of officers were against him, Morínigo had the backing of Colorado party militias and Argentinian President Juan Peron; he managed to win a conflict that caused many thousand deaths and up to 300,000 people to flee as refugees.[11] The future dictator Alfredo Stroessner was one of the few officers who remained loyal to Morínigo during the civil war. For the next 15 years, the Colorados were the only legal party in Paraguay.

Removal from power edit

On February 15, 1948, Morínigo organized presidential elections which were won by the only candidate allowed to run, Juan Natalicio González —leader of the Colorado Party's Red Banner faction — with whom he had reached agreement that in return for his support of Gonzalez for president, he could continue as army's commander-in-chief. To prevent this, on June 3 some Colorado Party loyalists under Felipe Molas López revolted and sent him into exile in Argentina. Supreme Court Chief Justice Juan Manuel Frutos was sworn in as interim president, serving the last two months of Morínigo's term until González was officially inaugurated on August 15, 1948.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ "TESTIMONIOS DE UN PRESIDENTE – ENTREVISTA AL GRAL. HIGINIO MORÍNIGO," by Augusto Ocampos Caballero. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  2. ^ "HIGINIO MORÍNIGO MARTÍNEZ - Portal Guaraní". portalguarani.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  3. ^ Current Biography 1941, pp. 608–10
  4. ^ Id. at 609
  5. ^ A Reference Guide to Latin American History p.211
  6. ^ The Cambridge History of Latin America, Volume 6
  7. ^ Richard B. Baldauf and Robert B. Kaplan, Language Planning and Policy in Latin America, p. 249 (Multilingual Matters, 2007)
  8. ^ Paraguayan Civil War (1947)
  9. ^ Historical Dictionary of Paraguay
  10. ^ The Cambridge History of Latin America, Volume 6
  11. ^ The South America Handbook
  12. ^ "Paraguay President Deposed by Army," El Paso Herald-Post, June 3, 1948, p. 1
Political offices
Preceded by President of Paraguay
1940–1948
Succeeded by

higinio, morínigo, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, morínigo, second, maternal, family, name, martínez, higinio, nicolás, morínigo, martínez, january, 1897, january, 1983, paraguayan, military, officer, politician, served, 35th, president, paragu. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Morinigo and the second or maternal family name is Martinez Higinio Nicolas Morinigo Martinez 11 January 1897 27 January 1983 was a Paraguayan military officer and politician who served as the 35th president of Paraguay from 1940 to 1948 ruling as a military dictator 1 Major GeneralHiginio MorinigoPortrait c 194635th President of ParaguayIn office September 7 1940 June 3 1948Preceded byJose Felix EstigarribiaSucceeded byJuan Manuel FrutosMinister of War and Navy of ParaguayIn office May 17 1940 September 7 1940Preceded byEduardo Torreani VieraSucceeded byPaulino AntolaMinister of the Interior of ParaguayIn office January 25 1939 August 15 1939Preceded byArturo BraySucceeded byNicolas DelgadoPersonal detailsBornHiginio Nicolas Morinigo MartinezJanuary 11 1897Paraguari ParaguayDiedJanuary 27 1983 1983 01 27 aged 86 Asuncion ParaguayPolitical partyNoneSpouseDolores Ferrari 1932 1983 ChildrenHiginio Emilio Juan Alberto Guillermo GerardoMilitary serviceRankMajor General 1940 Born to a mestizo family Morinigo pursued a military career serving as a prominent officer of the Paraguayan Army during the Chaco War After the war he served in the cabinet of liberal President Felix Paiva In May 1940 Morinigo was appointed Minister of War by President Jose Felix Estigarribia After Estigarribia s death on 7 September Morinigo succeeded him as acting president Due to the new constitution enacted by Estigarribia shortly before his death which gave immense power to the president Morinigo was able to establish a military dictatorship In 1943 after three years serving as acting president Morinigo was elected to a full term having ran unopposed as all political parties were banned He was overthrown and was forced to resign in 1948 due to suspicions that he wanted to perpetuate himself in power despite Juan Natalicio Gonzalez being chosen as his successor he was replaced by then President of the Supreme Court of Justice Juan Manuel Frutos as Provisional President 2 Contents 1 Early life and military career 2 Dictatorship 1940 1948 2 1 Pro fascist sympathies 2 2 Postwar liberalization 2 3 Civil war of 1947 2 4 Removal from power 3 ReferencesEarly life and military career editHiginio Nicolas Morinigo Martinez was born on 11 January 1897 in Paraguari Paraguari Department to a mestizo family of merchants He grew up speaking both Spanish and Guarani He attended military college and entered the Paraguayan Army in 1922 He participated in the Chaco War and was appointed the Army s Chief of Staff in 1936 Morinigo gained fame in Paraguay during the February Revolution of 1936 by heading an expedition to the site of the Battle of Cerro Cora to retrieve the remains of Francisco Solano Lopez President Jose Felix Estigarribia himself a Chaco War hero and supporter of the Liberal Party promoted Morinigo to general and appointed him as Minister of War on May 2 1940 After Estigarribia s unexpected death in an airplane crash on September 7 Morinigo was chosen by the army and Liberal ministers as interim President for the two month period leading to new Presidential elections 3 Dictatorship 1940 1948 editOn September 30 1940 after growing disagreements with the President the Liberal ministers resigned from the government On October 16 Morinigo announced that the Presidential elections would be postponed for two years Soon afterward he announced a policy of discipline hierarchy and order disciplina jerarquia y orden and stated that persons who spread subversive ideas would be subject to confinement 4 On November 30 Morinigo banned all political parties and assumed dictatorial powers under a state of siege In a midday radio address announcing these measures Morinigo declared The people and the Army from this moment will be under a single command In his self coup and subsequent rule he was greatly assisted by the 1940 Constitution a severely authoritarian document written by the Liberals and Estigarribia that gave the president sweeping executive powers To strengthen his authority on February 4 1941 Morinigo removed the influential Colonel Peredes from the post of interior minister On April 17 1941 he suppressed a febrerista uprising by supporters of the February Revolution 5 On April 25 1942 he banned the Liberal Party accusing them of conspiring with the Bolivians and exiled Party s leaders 6 Morinigo s only remaining supporters were radicals from the Colorado Party and the Army During his dictatorship he faced widespread resistance including general strikes and military revolts but he survived by maintaining the loyalty of the Paraguayan Army which received 45 of the country s budget Morinigo relied on the right wing Colorado faction Guion Rojo the Red Banner led by Juan Natalico Gonzalez as a paramilitary police force to intimidate febreristas and Liberals Opposition newspapers were shut down and publishers exiled 7 Morinigo finally held presidential elections on February 15 1943 he was the sole candidate 8 Pro fascist sympathies edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Higinio Morinigo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Just as in other South American countries pro Nazi and pro fascist sympathies at this time were quite strong in the society and among military officers After it entered World War II in 1941 the United States tried to exert some pressure on Morinigo to limit the influence of Axis supporters He kept Paraguay neutral for most of the war He only officially declared war against the Axis in February 1945 without sending any soldiers to fight A surge of German influence in the region and Argentina s pro Axis leanings alarmed the United States which sought to wean Paraguay away from German and Argentine influence At the same time the United States sought to enhance its presence in the region and pursued close cooperation with Brazil Argentina s traditional rival To this end the United States provided to Paraguay sizable amounts of funds and supplies under the Lend Lease Agreement provided loans for public works and gave technical assistance in agriculture and health care The United States Department of State approved of closer ties between Brazil and Paraguay and especially supported Brazil s offer to finance a road project designed to reduce Paraguay s dependence on Argentina United States protests over German and Argentine activities in Paraguay fell on deaf ears While the United States defined its interests in terms of resisting the fascist threat Paraguayan officials believed their best interests lay in economic expediency and were reluctant to antagonize Germany until the outcome of the war was no longer in doubt Many Paraguayans believed Germany was no more of a threat to Paraguay s sovereignty than the United States Much to the displeasure of the United States and Britain Morinigo refused to act against German economic and diplomatic interests until the very end of the war German agents had successfully converted many Paraguayans to the Axis cause South America s first Nazi Party branch had been founded in Paraguay in 1931 German immigrant schools churches hospitals farmers cooperatives youth groups and charitable societies became active Axis backers All of those organizations prominently displayed swastikas and portraits of Adolf Hitler Morinigo s regime was pro Axis Large numbers of Paraguayan military officers and government officials were openly sympathetic to the Axis Among these officials was the national police chief who named his son Adolfo Hirohito after the best known Axis leaders By 1941 the official newspaper El Pais had adopted an overtly pro German stance At the same time the government strictly controlled pro Allied labor unions Police cadets wore swastikas and Italian insignia on their uniforms The December 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Germany s declaration of war against the United States gave the United States the leverage it needed however to force Morinigo to commit himself publicly to the Allied cause Morinigo officially severed diplomatic relations with the Axis countries in 1942 although he did not declare war against Germany until February 1945 Nonetheless Morinigo continued to maintain close relations with the heavily German influenced Argentine military throughout the war and provided a haven for Axis spies and agents The outbreak of World War II eased Morinigo s task of ruling Paraguay while keeping the army happy because it stimulated demand for Paraguayan export products such as meat hides and cotton and boosted the country s export earnings More important United States policy toward Latin America at this time made Paraguay eligible for major economic assistance Paraguay received American financial help which was used for improving roads and other infrastructure projects Postwar liberalization edit Pressure from the US for democratization swept South America after the war On June 9 1946 Morinigo dismissed Colonel Benitez Vera the right wing head of the army and crushed a short uprising by Vera s supporters He then created a civilian coalition government formed by Colorado Party members and leftist febreristas followers of former dictator Rafael Franco and allowed some political freedoms going so far as legalizing the Paraguayan Communist Party 9 Despite all this in September 1946 he ordered suppression of opposition groups and used the Red Banner paramilitary group to attack the office of the Liberal newspaper El Pais Civil war of 1947 edit Feeling that Morinigo was favouring the right wing Colorados the febreristas made common cause with the Liberal Party and the Communist Party in the Civil War of 1947 The relaxation of the dictatorship was used by political parties to assert their influence in state institutions In January 1947 officers loyal to the Colorado Party gained control of the army and on January 11 febreristas quit the government and called on the army to overthrow Morinigo who responded by declaring a state of siege and arresting febreristas Liberals and Communists 10 On March 7 a bloody civil war started Despite the fact that 80 of soldiers and 90 of officers were against him Morinigo had the backing of Colorado party militias and Argentinian President Juan Peron he managed to win a conflict that caused many thousand deaths and up to 300 000 people to flee as refugees 11 The future dictator Alfredo Stroessner was one of the few officers who remained loyal to Morinigo during the civil war For the next 15 years the Colorados were the only legal party in Paraguay Removal from power edit On February 15 1948 Morinigo organized presidential elections which were won by the only candidate allowed to run Juan Natalicio Gonzalez leader of the Colorado Party s Red Banner faction with whom he had reached agreement that in return for his support of Gonzalez for president he could continue as army s commander in chief To prevent this on June 3 some Colorado Party loyalists under Felipe Molas Lopez revolted and sent him into exile in Argentina Supreme Court Chief Justice Juan Manuel Frutos was sworn in as interim president serving the last two months of Morinigo s term until Gonzalez was officially inaugurated on August 15 1948 12 References edit TESTIMONIOS DE UN PRESIDENTE ENTREVISTA AL GRAL HIGINIO MORINIGO by Augusto Ocampos Caballero Retrieved October 29 2014 HIGINIO MORINIGO MARTINEZ Portal Guarani portalguarani com in Spanish Retrieved 2023 07 30 Current Biography 1941 pp 608 10 Id at 609 A Reference Guide to Latin American History p 211 The Cambridge History of Latin America Volume 6 Richard B Baldauf and Robert B Kaplan Language Planning and Policy in Latin America p 249 Multilingual Matters 2007 Paraguayan Civil War 1947 Historical Dictionary of Paraguay The Cambridge History of Latin America Volume 6 The South America Handbook Paraguay President Deposed by Army El Paso Herald Post June 3 1948 p 1 Political officesPreceded byJose Felix Estigarribia President of Paraguay1940 1948 Succeeded byJuan Manuel Frutos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Higinio Morinigo amp oldid 1211669962, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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