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Francisco Morales Bermudez

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Role
  
Political figure

Name
  
Francisco Bermudez


President
  
Juan Velasco Alvarado

President
  
Juan Velasco Alvarado

Francisco Morales Bermudez Estudios Sociales Gobierno de Francisco MoralesBermdez

Prime Minister
  
Oscar Vargas Prieto Jorge Fernandez-Maldonado Guillermo Arbulu Galliani Oscar Molina Pallochia Pedro Richter Prada

Preceded by
  
Juan Velasco Alvarado (President of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Government)

Preceded by
  
Luis Edgardo Mercado Jarrin

Similar People
  
Juan Velasco Alvarado, Remigio Morales Bermudez, Fernando Belaunde Terry, Manuel Prado Ugarteche, Manuel A Odria

Vice President
  
Pedro Ritcher Prada

Succeeded by
  
Fernando Belaunde Terry

Gobierno de francisco morales bermudez 1975 1980 traidor a la patria en hd 2015


Francisco Morales-Bermúdez Cerruti (born October 4, 1921) is a Peruvian general served as the President of Peru (2nd President of the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces) (1975–1980), after deposing his predecessor, General Juan Velasco. His grandfather and all his original family were from the old Peruvian department of Tarapacá, which is now part of the Chilean territory. Unable to control the political and economic troubles that the nation faced, he was forced to return power to civilian rule, marking the end of the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces, installed by a coup d'etat on October 3, 1968. At age 95, he is currently the oldest living former Peruvian president.

Contents

Francisco Morales Bermudez franciscomoralesbermudezjpg

Early years

Francisco Morales Bermudez wwwbiografiasyvidascombiografiamfotosmorales

Born in Lima in 1921, he is the son of Army Colonel Remigio Morales Bermúdez and grandson of ex-President Remigio Morales Bermúdez. He received most of his education at Lima's Colegio Inmaculada. In 1939, he was accepted to the Escuela Militar de Chorrillos (Chorrillos Military School). After his graduation, he was an important member of the Centro de Altos Estudios Militares (CAEM).

Political career

Francisco Morales Bermudez Gobierno de Francisco Morales Bermudez 1975 1980 Traidor

Bermúdez achieved the rank of Brigadier General and was appointed to his first political post in 1968 as minister of finance in the administration of Fernando Belaúnde. Internal problems in government forced him to resign after two months.

Francisco Morales-Bermúdez FRANCISCO MORALES BERMUDEZ EL TRAIDOR SERA JUZGADO EN ITALIA POR

In 1968, after Belaúnde had been deposed by a coup, the military government led by Velasco asked him to return to the post of Minister of Finance. In 1974, he resigned again, this time because he was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Peruvian Army. In 1975, he was appointed to be both Prime Minister and Minister of War.

With Velasco's health deteriorating, Morales Bermúdez led a military junta against General Velasco and took over as President of Peru on August 29, 1975, leading the country through one of its most severe economic crises. He diverged from the socialist-leaning tendencies of first phase (1968–1975) of the Peruvian Revolution, proclaiming a 'Second Phase' that would lead to a return to democracy.

Legacy

The failure of his political and economic reforms was a severe blow to his administration, hampered by constant political pressure from all sides. A Constitutional Assembly was created in 1978, which replaced the 1933 Constitution enacted during Óscar R. Benavides's presidency; he also called for national elections the next year.

After the 1980 National Elections he turned power over to a legally established government, headed by President Fernando Belaúnde.

After he has presidency, he kept a relatively low profile in Peruvian politics, making sporadic speeches regarding the situation of the army.

In 1985, he made an unsuccessful run for the presidency, obtaining a fraction of one percent of the vote.

Morales Bermudez is currently being prosecuted by Italian judge Luisianna Figliolia for the presumed forced disappearance of 25 Italian citizens in the frame of Operation Condor, a campaign of political oppression against leftists orchestrated by the right-wing dictatorships of South America in the 1970s.

References

Francisco Morales-Bermúdez Wikipedia


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