Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Adina Bastidas

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Preceded by
  
Isaias Rodriguez

Name
  
Adina Bastidas

Succeeded by
  
Diosdado Cabello

Party
  
Fifth Republic Movement

Nationality
  
Venezuelan

Resigned
  
January 13, 2002

Political party
  
MVR


Adina Bastidas runruneswpcontentuploads201501adina2jpg

Born
  
11 June 1943 (age 80) Caracas, Venezuela (
1943-06-11
)

Role
  
Former Vice President of Venezuela

Previous office
  
Vice President of Venezuela (2000–2002)

28 ene 2001 hugo ch vez y adina bastidas en al presidente n 60


Adina Mercedes Bastidas Castillo (born 11 June 1943) is a Venezuelan economist, formerly active in politics. She was appointed Vice President of Venezuela on 24 December 2000 by President Hugo Chávez, and served in the post until 13 January 2002, the first woman to hold the job in the country's history. She was later appointed Production and Commerce Minister.

Contents

Bastidas was also the Director for the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela at the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, DC.

Views

According to the BBC, Bastidas is considered a controversial left winger; she is also considered a prominent critic of Venezuela's private sector. Her appointment as Commerce Minister, coming after weeks of protests against President Chávez's economic policies, was seen as a further radicalization of Chávez's government, according to the BBC. Chávez called her "a first class revolutionary," and deemed her work "exceptional."

At the Latin American and Caribbean Encounter on the Dialogue of Civilizations, held in Caracas on November 8, 2001, Bastidas said:

"The terrorism of the oppressed is a perverse and lamentable byproduct of a WASP dominance that has become unbearable for the most radical and violent of the subjugated peoples ... Supplications and reason will not suffice to impose dialogue on countries of the North. The South must achieve a capacity to unite, resist, and persevere until it attains a new world order that is truly an order, not an immense disorder, under the heavens."

Personal life

On 13 January 2015, Bastidas was subject to burglary and robbery at her penthouse in Caracas, as stated by her son on his Twitter account. She refused to make any public statements regarding the event.

References

Adina Bastidas Wikipedia