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Secretary General
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José Miguel Insulza was elected OAS Secretary General on May 2, 2005, and took
office on May 26 of that year. The Chilean politician has an accomplished record
of public service in his country. At the beginning of his five-year term as
Secretary General, he pledged to strengthen the Organization’s “political
relevance and its capacity for action.”
A
lawyer by profession, he has a law degree from the University of Chile, did
postgraduate studies at the Latin American Social Sciences Faculty (FLACSO), and
has a master’s in political science from the University of Michigan. Until 1973,
he was Professor of Political Theory at the University of Chile and of Political
Science at Chile’s Catholic University. He also served, until that year, as
Political Advisor to the Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Director of the
Diplomatic Academy of Chile.
He
became involved in politics during his student years and served as Vice
President of the Chilean Students Association, President of the Center for Law
Students of the University of Chile, and President of the Union of University
Federations of Chile.
In
the early 1970s, Insulza played an active role in Salvador Allende’s Popular
Unity government and, following the coup that brought General Augusto Pinochet
into power, he went into exile for 15 years, first in Rome (1974-1980) and after
that in Mexico (1981-1988). In Mexico City, he was a researcher and then
Director of the United States Studies Institute in the Center for Economic
Research and Teaching. He also taught at Mexico’s National Autonomous
University, the Ibero-American University, and the Diplomatic Studies Institute.
Insulza was able to return to Chile in early 1988 and joined the Coalition of
Parties for Democracy, the coalition that won the plebiscite against the
Pinochet regime in October of that year and that has been victorious in all
democratic elections in the country since 1990. A member of the Socialist Party,
he has held a large number of high-level posts in the Coalition governments.
Under the presidency of Patricio Aylwin, Insulza served as Chilean Ambassador
for International Cooperation, Director of Multilateral Economic Affairs at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Vice President of the International Cooperation
Agency.
In
March 1994, under the administration of President Eduardo Frei, Insulza became
Under-Secretary of Foreign Affairs and in September of that year was appointed
Minister of Foreign Affairs. In 1999, he became Minister Secretary General of
the Presidency, and the following year he became President Ricardo Lagos’s
Minister of the Interior and Vice President of the Republic. When he left that
post in May 2005, he had served as a government minister for more than a decade,
the longest continuous tenure for a minister in Chilean history.
Born on June 2, 1943, Insulza is married to Georgina Núñez Reyes and has three
children: Francisca, Javier and Daniel.
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