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Francisco Morales Bermúdez
F. Morales Bermúdez.jpg
Morales Bermúdez in 1975
President of Peru
2nd President of the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces
In office
29 August 1975 – 28 July 1980
Prime Minister
  • Oscar Vargas Prieto
  • Jorge Fernández Maldonado
  • Guillermo Arbulú Galliani
  • Óscar Molina Pallochia
  • Pedro Richter Prada
Preceded by Juan Velasco Alvarado
Succeeded by Fernando Belaúnde
(as constitutional president, military government collapse)
Prime Minister of Peru
In office
1 February 1975 – 29 August 1975
President Juan Velasco Alvarado
Preceded by Luis Edgardo Mercado Jarrín
Succeeded by Oscar Vargas Prieto
Minister of War
In office
1 February 1975 – 29 August 1975
President Juan Velasco Alvarado
Preceded by Luis Edgardo Mercado Jarrín
Succeeded by Oscar Vargas Prieto
General Commander of the Peruvian Army
In office
1 February 1975 – 29 August 1975
President Juan Velasco Alvarado
Preceded by Luis Edgardo Mercado Jarrín
Succeeded by Oscar Vargas Prieto
Minister of Economy and Finance
In office
13 June 1969 – 2 January 1974
President Juan Velasco Alvarado
Preceded by Ángel Valdivia Morriberon (Minister of Finance and Commerce)
Succeeded by Guillermo Marcó del Pont
Minister of Finance and Commerce
In office
20 March 1968 – 21 May 1968
President Fernando Belaúnde
Preceded by Raúl Ferrero Rebagliati
Succeeded by Manuel Ulloa Elías
Personal details
Born
Francisco Regimio Morales-Bermúdez Cerruti

(1921-10-04)4 October 1921
Lima, Peru
Died 14 July 2022(2022-07-14) (aged 100)
Lima, Peru
Spouses
  • Rosa Pedraglio
    (m. 1942; died 1998)
  • Alicia Saffer Michaelsen
    (m. 1999)
Children 5
Profession Army general
Military service
Branch/service  Peruvian Army
Years of service 1941–1980
Rank General

Francisco Remigio Morales Bermúdez Cerruti (4 October 1921 – 14 July 2022) was a Peruvian politician and general who was the de facto President of Peru (2nd President of the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces) between 1975 and 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 Chile. 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'état in 1968.

Early years

Morales Bermúdez was born in Lima on 4 October 1921. He was 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 into the Escuela Militar de Chorrillos (Chorrillos Military School). After his graduation, he was an important member of the Centro de Altos Estudios Militares (Center for Advanced Military Studies).

Political career

Morales Bermúdez achieved the rank of brigadier general and was appointed to his first political post in 1968 as Minister of Economy and Finance in the administration of Fernando Belaúnde. Internal problems in government forced him to resign after two months.

In 1968, after Belaúnde had been deposed by a coup, the military government led by General Juan Velasco asked him to return to the post of Minister of Economy and 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 Velasco's prime minister and minister of war.

Presidency (1975–1980)

With President Velasco's health deteriorating, Morales Bermúdez led a military coup against Velasco and took over as President of Peru on 29 August 1975, leading the country through one of its most severe economic crises. He diverged from the socialist-leaning tendencies of the first phase (1968–1975) of the Peruvian Revolution. His regime participated in Operation Condor, with Peruvian forces collaborating with the Intelligence Battalion 601 in the kidnapping of Argentines in Lima in 1980. Around the end of Morales Bermúdez's tenure, a housing crisis emerged which started the Lost Decade. Morales Bermúdez, politically pressured from all sides, failed in enacting successful political and economic reform.

A Constituent Assembly convened by the Morales Bermudez administration was created in 1978, which replaced the 1933 Constitution enacted during Óscar R. Benavides's presidency. After elections were held in 1980, he returned power over to the first democratically elected government after 12 years of military rule, headed by President Fernando Belaúnde.

Post-presidency (1980–2022)

After leaving office, Morales Bermúdez kept a relatively low profile in Peruvian politics, making sporadic speeches regarding the situation of the Peruvian army.

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

Francisco Morales Bermúdez (cropped)
Morales Bermúdez in October 2016, aged 95

Morales Bermúdez was prosecuted by Italian judge Luisianna Figliolia for the forced disappearance of 25 Italian citizens in Peru during Operation Condor, a campaign backed by the United States government of political repression orchestrated by right-wing South American dictatorships during the 1970s and 1980s. On 17 January 2017, the Corte d'Assise in Rome found Morales Bermúdez guilty and sentenced him to life imprisonment.

On 16 June 2021, Morales Bermúdez was among 63 former Peruvian military officials who signed a letter calling on the Peruvian armed forces to "...according to what is established in Article 46 of the our Constitution, the Armed Forces would have the right to non-obedience and therefore to disavow as President and Supreme Chief of the Armed Forces and National Police a person who has been appointed by violating the Constitution and Laws of our country, being able to appeal to the Congress of the Republic to provide a democratic solution in accordance with the Law" in response to the election that month of President-elect Pedro Castillo, the target of unsubstantiated claims of electoral fraud by his opponent Keiko Fujimori. The Ministry of Defense of Peru promptly issued a release where it clarified that this letter “do not represent the Armed Forces.”

Morales Bermúdez turned 100 on 4 October 2021, and died at a hospital in the Miraflores District of Lima on 14 July 2022.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Francisco Morales Bermúdez para niños

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