Guillermo Capobianco

Guillermo Capobianco Ribera (6 June 1945 – 12 May 2020) was a Bolivian lawyer, writer and politician.[1]

Guillermo Capobianco Ribera
Minister of the Interior, Migration, Justice, and Social Defense
In office
6 August 1989  15 March 1991
PresidentJaime Paz Zamora
Preceded byEduardo Pérez Beltrán
Succeeded byCarlos Saavedra Bruno
Minister of Urban Development and Housing
In office
13 April 1984  10 January 1985
PresidentHernán Siles Zuazo
Preceded byWalter Delgadillo Terceros
Succeeded byEmilio Ascarrunz Paredes
Personal details
Born
Guillermo Capobianco Ribera

(1945-06-06)6 June 1945
Concepción, Santa Cruz
Died12 May 2020(2020-05-12) (aged 74)
Political partyRevolutionary Left Movement
SpouseGloria Cruz Justiniano
EducationGabriel René Moreno Autonomous University

He was Bolivia's Minister of the Interior from 6 August 1989 to 15 March 1991 during the government of President Jaime Paz Zamora and was also Bolivia's Minister of Housing and Urban Development from 13 April 1984 to 10 January 1985 during the second government of President Hernán Siles Suazo.[2][3][4]

Biography

He was born on 6 June 1945 in the town of Concepción, which is located in the Ñuflo de Chávez Province in the Department of Santa Cruz. Ribera graduated in 1963 from Colegio Florida in the city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra. He continued with his higher studies, entering to study law at the Gabriel René Moreno Autonomous University (UAGRM), graduating as a lawyer. During his university years he was the executive secretary of the Local University Federation (FUL).[5]

He began his youth leadership in Christian democracy in the late 1960s, starting his militancy in the ranks of the party of the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR). While the MIR was being founded, he was studying communication in Europe at the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium.[5]

He returned to Bolivia in the late 1970s where he became the main leader of the MIR in the Department of Santa Cruz, which at the time was a less than left-wing department.3

He died on 12 May 2020 at the age of seventy-four.[1]

1978 National Elections

He entered the country's political life at the age of thirty-three in 1978. That year he participated as a candidate for deputy in the national elections, but those elections were annulled due to proven fraud.[5]

Member of Parliament of Bolivia from 1979-1980

The following year, in 1979, he again participated as a candidate for the post of deputy for the Department of Santa Cruz representing the Unidad Democrática y Popular (UDP). But the quagmire of those elections in Congress forced the government of President Lidia Gueiler Tejada to call new general elections to be held in June 1980.[5]

Deputy of Bolivia 1980-1985

He returned to participate in the 1980 election where he managed to get elected as a deputy by the UDP, but was imprisoned by the government of Luis García Meza and exiled abroad. He returned to Bolivia with the recovery of democracy in 1982 and took up his position as a parliamentarian.[5]

Minister of Housing and Urban Development of Bolivia (1984-1985)

On 13 April 1984, he was sworn in as Bolivia's Minister of Housing and Urban Development to replace Walter Delgadillo Terceros, who had resigned. He remained in office until 10 January 1985, when he was replaced by Emilio Ascarrunz Paredes.

Member of Parliament of Bolivia 1985-1989

He again ran for re-election as a deputy for the Department of Santa Cruz, but this time he did so representing the party of the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR). He managed to win the parliamentary seat by remaining in office from 6 August 1985 to 6 August 1989.[5]

1987 Municipal Elections

He also participated in the 1987 municipal elections, running for mayor of Santa Cruz de la Sierra on behalf of the MIR, but was unsuccessful after coming in second place.[5]

1989 National Elections

In 1989, he again participated in the national elections of that same year, as a senator for the Department of Santa Cruz for the MIR, but this time he was not successful either.[5]

Minister of the Interior of Bolivia (1989-1991)

On 6 August 1989, Bolivian President Jaime Paz Zamora appointed Guillermo Capobianco as the new Minister of the Interior of Bolivia to replace Eduardo Pérez Beltrán, who was in the previous government of Víctor Paz Estenssoro.[5]

During his term as minister, he managed to dismantle the terrorist group Comisión Néstor Paz Zamora (CNPZ) and the Tupac Katari Guerrilla Army (EGTK), which at the time was made up of Felipe Quispe "El Mallku" (1942) and Alvaro Garcia Linera (1962).[5]

Lonsdale case

In June 1990, private businessman Jorge Lonsdale (1930-1990) was kidnapped by the terrorist group Nestor Paz Zamora Commission (CNP) led by Miguel Northuster (1961-1990), an Italian originally from South Tyrol. On 5 December of that same year, the Bolivian police stormed the house where Jorge Lonsdale was kidnapped. The result of the police operation ended with the death of the kidnapping terrorists and the kidnapped businessman. Public opinion in the country described the police operation as a failure and the Ministry of the Interior was accused of having used unnecessary violence in addition to the murder of all the kidnappers.[5]

In 1991, Ribera appointed former Army General Faustino Rico Toro to the post of anti-narcotics director. This decision caused discomfort at the U.S. Embassy in Bolivia, which asked for his resignation as interior minister, so he was forced to resign his post on 15 March 1991, and was replaced by Carlos Saavedra Buno.[5]

References

  1. "Fallece exministro Guillermo Capobianco, otrora hombre fuerte del MIR". eju.tv (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  2. "Falleció Guillermo Capobianco, exministro del Interior en el Gobierno de Jaime Paz | EL DEBER". eldeber.com.bo (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  3. "Murió Guillermo Capobianco, exministro del Interior en el gobierno de Jaime Paz". La Razón | Noticias de Bolivia y el Mundo. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  4. Bolivia. Congreso Nacional. Cámara de Diputados (1996). Redactor de la h. Cámara de diputados. Imprenta y litografía artistica. p. 68.
  5. Ballivián, Salvador Romero. Diccionario biográfico de parlamentarios 1979 - 2019. pp. 128, 129, 130.
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