Aristides Maria Pereira (born 1923) fought for the freedom of his people and later became president of Cape Verde.
Searching for Independence
Aristides Maria Pereira was born on November 17, 1923, on Boa Vista, one of Cape Verde's islands. He was the son of Porfirio Pereira Tavares and Maria das Neves Crus Silva. He was educated at the Lycee de Cap-Vert, and he began a career as a radio-telegraphist when he finished his schooling. Pereira rose to the position of head of Telecommunications Services in Bissau, formerly Portuguese Guinea and now known as Guinea-Bissau, across from Cape Verde on the African west coast.
Pereira became an early proponent of independence from Portugal, especially after meeting Amilcar Cabral, a man native to the islands but living in Guinea, as Cabral began a series of radio talks during the summer of 1949. Since 1466, when the first settlers arrived, the Portuguese had ruled Cape Verde, both intermarrying with and brutalizing the native population. Members of more than two dozen African tribes initially were brought to the islands to provide slave labor for the Portuguese.
Famines in the islands earlier in the 1940s "provoked a new trend of thought. There had to be change, there had to be a different future," recalled Pereira."Many emigrated: not just for jobs but in the search for a way ahead. Some of us went to Portugal, others to Angola, several to Bissau. Yet all of us went with the same notion, the idea of finding a different way ahead."
A Long Struggle
In 1956 Pereira joined Cabral and others to found the Partido Africano da Independencia da Guine's e Cabo Verde, a political movement whose acronym was PAIGC. Cabral was a socialist, and both the Soviet Union and Cuba provided support for PAIGC initially. Pereira held various positions with the PAIGC. He was a member of the Political Bureau's Central Committee, from 1956 until 1970; assistant secretary-general, 1964 - 1973; and secretary-general, 1973 - 1981.
Cabral was assassinated in January 1973 by the Portuguese secret police. But Pereira and his comrades did not give up. He became president of newly independent Cape Verde from 1975 until 1991.
Many Obstacles
Pereira's task as the new republic's first president was a daunting one. Physically, the new country suffered from a harsh climate. Disastrous droughts and consequent famines have plagued the islands for centuries. A series of particularly devastating droughts hit the islands throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, each one killing between 10 and 40 percent of the population. Many islanders fled, some of them to the United States.
Agriculture is a challenge due to low annual rainfall and extensive soil erosion. Ninety percent of the country's food must be imported. There are underground reserves of water, but extracting them is too costly.
When the country gained independence it was an extremely poor and largely illiterate culture. Health services and doctors were absent. Roads, if they existed at all, were primitive at best. According to a 2000 article published on Europa, the portal site for the European union, "At independence in 1975, there was a certain trepidation as to whether the country could survive.… Not just to survive, but to forge an identity as a country with a renowned cultural richness, a stable post-independence period, and good relations with its diverse international partners and neighbours."
Remarkable Progress
Many nations joined in the effort to support Cape Verde, including the Soviet Union, China, and the United States. The United Nations and its World Food Program helped feed the people. International assistance created a viable infrastructure and a national health service. A program of reforestation was implemented to recover the trees lost to so many droughts and water conservation efforts were put into place.
During his terms as president, Pereira was often criticized for crushing opposing political views. He was known, however, for working to create policies that would help the poor. His alliances with China and Libya were controversial.
The 1991 constitution allowed for the presence of opposing political parties. Pereira was defeated. It was the first time in sub-Saharan Africa that a single-party government was voted out of office.
In July 2002, Cape Verde, along with the Seychelles and Mauritius, both off the eastern coast of Africa in the Indian Ocean, were named the best places to live in Africa by the Human Development Report. Though Cape Verde was listed at number 100 worldwide, the progress in the country was remarkable. Life expectancy at birth had climbed to nearly 70. The literacy rate remained low, as did the per capital income, but improvements were being made. Cape Verde's political stability was considered an important factor in a promising future.
Books
Columbia Encyclopedia, Edition 6, Columbia University Press, 2000.
International Who's Who 2003, 66th edition, Europa Publications, 2002.
Periodicals
Africa News Service, October 28, 2002.
Current Anthropology, August - October 2003.
East African, July 16, 2001.
Footsteps, September 2001.
Monthly Review, December 1998.
Research in African Literatures, Winter 1993.
Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 8, No. 21, Summer 1981.
UNESCO Courier, November 1992.
Online
"Alert Net-Cape Verde," Reuters Foundation AlertNet website,http://www.alertnet.org (January 5, 2004).
Almeida, Raymond A., "Chronological References: Cabo Verde/Cape Verdean American," University of Massachusetts Special Programs website,http://www.umassd.edu (December 9, 2003).
"Cape Verde," Netfirms website,http://exim.netfirms.com/cv (December 9, 2003).
"Cape Verde," New Internationalist website,http://www.newint.org (January 5, 2004).
"Cape Verde," Tiscali Reference website (Hutchinson Encyclopedia),http://www.tiscali.co.uk (December 9, 2003).
"Cape Verde," World Statesmen website,http://www.worldstatesmen.org (December 9, 2003).
"Cape Verde celebrates its 25th anniversary," Afrol News website,http://www.afrol.com (January 5, 2004).
"Cape Verde the struggle for Independence," University of Massachusetts Special Programs website,http://www.umassd.edu (December 9, 2003).
"Cape Verdean President to step down in 2005," Afrol News website,http://www.afrol.com (January 5, 2004).
"Civil War in Guinnea Bissau," Conflict Trends, Accord website (Zaire),http://www.accord.org (December 9, 2003).
"Country Information on Cape Verde," SOS-Kinderdorf International (SOS Childrens' Villages) website,http://www.soschildrensvillages.org (January 4, 2004).
"Country profile: Cape Verde," BBC News website,http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk (December 9, 2003).
"Democracy and Governance in Africa, Conclusions and papers presented at a conference of the Africa Leadership Forum, Ota, Nigeria, 29 November-1 December 1991," Africa Leadership Forum website,http://www.africaleadership.org (January 5, 2004).
"The History of Cape Verde (Green Cabo)," Africa Infomarket organization website,http://africainfomarket.org (January 5, 2004).
"Letter to President Aristides Pereira of Cape Verde on United States Acceptance of the Gift of the Schooner Ernestina," University of Texas website,http://www.reagan.utexas.edu (December 9, 2003).
"Ministry of the Finances and Planning," Cape Verde government website,http://www.gov.cv (January 5, 2004).
"No fist is big enough to hide the sky: the liberation of Guine and Cape Verde: aspects of an African revolution," ISBN database website,http://isbndb.com (December 9, 2003).
"Seychelles, Mauritius and Cape Verde 'best in Africa,'" Afrol News website,http://www.afrol.com (January 5, 2004).
"Taking Stock," Europa (European Union website),http://europa.eu.int (January 5, 2004).
president; secretary general
Personal Information
Born Aristides Maria Pereira on November 17, 1923, in Boa Vista, Cape Verde; son of Porf'rino Pereira Tavares and Maria das Neves Crus Silva; married Carlina Fortes, 1959; children: one son, two daughters.
Education: Trained as a radio-telegraph technician at Lycée du Cap-Vert.
Memberships: Political Bureau, Central Committee, PAIGC, 1956-70; member, Permanent Commission of Executive Committee for Struggle in Charge of Security, Control, and Foreign Affairs, 1970; Orders of Santiago of the Sword and Infante Dom Henrique, Portugal.
Career
Began as a radio-telegraph technician; head, Telecommunications Services, Bissau, Portugese Guinea (now Guinea-Bissau); founded African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) with late Am'lcar Cabral, 1956; fled to Republic of Guinea, 1960; Deputy secretary general, PAIGC, 1964-73; secretary general, PAIGC, 1973-81; secretary general, African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV), 1981; president, Republic of Cape Verde, 1975-91; defeated in elections, retired from politics, 1991.
Life's Work
Aristides Pereira fought for Cape Verde's independence and was the island nation's president for 16 years. A founder of the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC), Pereira helped organize the movement that eventually secured independence for Cape Verde from Portugal. Pereira's major challenge as president was the economic survival of the country which, with its limited land area, cannot support population growth. Pereira retired from politics in 1991 after instituting a multiparty system for Cape Verde and losing his reelection bid.
Aristides Maria Pereira was born on November 17, 1923, in Boa Vista, Cape Verde to Porf'rino Pereira Tavares and Maria das Neves Crus Silva. After secondary school, he trained as a radio-telegraph technician at Lyce du Cap-Vert. He married Carlina Fortes in 1959 and had one son and two daughters.
Cape Verde, the "green cape," is made up of ten mountainous islands about 300 miles off the coast of Senegal in West Africa. The islands were one of several Portuguese colonies in Africa, including Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau. Constant vulnerability to drought and limited natural resources often result in famine in Cape Verde, and the nation has an historically weak economy. Sixty percent of Cape Verdean people are of mixed descent--mostly of African slaves and European settlers, mainly Portuguese. The language of the islands, Crioulo, is a hybrid of Portuguese and a number of African languages.
In 1952 Pereira and Am'lcar Cabral began work to organize a resistance movement against Portuguese rule of Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau. Cabral and Pereira followed a Communist model to plan their resistance. "It's difficult not to use Marxist language in a liberation war," a Cape Verdean government official later told the Economist. Cabral was not "boxed into any social system, but pursued progress and social justice," he added.
In 1956, Pereira and Cabral founded the PAIGC to liberate the two Portuguese colonies. Their vision was ultimately to unite Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau as one nation. In 1958, PAIGC leader Cabral traveled to newly independent Republic of Guinea, which offered PAIGC a safe haven to prepare to infiltrate neighboring Guinea-Bissau. Pereira remained in Cape Verde. In 1959, he helped organize a dock strike in Guinea-Bissau that resulted in the deaths of 50 dock workers by the Portuguese government. The massacre ignited the previously nonviolent PAIGC and caused it to launch a war against the Portuguese for liberation.
Pereira in Exile, PAIGC at War
Pereira worked in Guinea-Bissau as the head of the telecommunications department until 1960, when he left to join Cabral in Guinea to set up PAIGC exile headquarters and a guerrilla training program. In Guinea, Pereira instituted a radio-information program that broadcast to nations supportive of the PAIGC cause. As head of international affairs for the PAIGC, Pereira was able to secure aid from the Soviet Union, Scandinavian nations, and the Organization of African Unity. The PAIGC's guerrilla campaigns began in 1963 in Guinea-Bissau and were led mostly by Cabral. Pereira was involved in the struggle, mostly in organizing underground sabotage groups in Guinea-Bissau. In 1964, Pereira became assistant secretary general of the PAIGC. By 1969, PAIGC forces controlled over two-thirds of Guinea-Bissau.
In 1973, Am'lcar Cabral was assassinated by the Portuguese secret police, and Pereira was kidnapped and put on a boat to Guinea-Bissau. Before he could be handed over to the Portuguese, he was rescued by the Guinean naval patrol. By this time, Pereira was deputy secretary general of the PAIGC, so he assumed party leadership after Cabral's death. Cabral's murder was a setback for the PAIGC, but Pereira took charge of the struggle and quickly brought it to a successful end. Am'lcar Cabral's brother, Luis Cabral, became president of newly independent Guinea-Bissau. Pereira returned to his homeland after almost 15 years and won an overwhelming election for president in 1975. However, Am'lcar Cabral remained an "ideological hero" of Cape Verdeans, according to the Economist.
When Cape Verde became independent July 5, 1975, and PAIGC went from being a nationalist party to functioning as a state government, a challenging transition. What evolved was a one-party state with a president and prime minister. Pereira and Prime Minister Pedro Pires led Cape Verde together.
Pereira as President
The Cape Verdean government, though friendly with the West, maintained connections to Communist states. Pereira's government "might be described as leftist-pragmatist," according to the Dictionary of African Historical Biography. His major challenge as president of Cape Verde was economic survival. The archipelago, with its limited land mass, cannot sustain a growing population, and many Cape Verdeans are forced to emigrate. Also, Cape Verde is limited in its natural resources. To his credit, Pereira was skillful in avoiding the nation's economic downfall. His government instituted a number successful resource-management and agrarian reforms to repair the weak economy. Cape Verde also depends heavily on foreign aid from a number of countries and support from expatriate citizens. The number of Cape Verdeans who live off the islands exceeds the number of those who remain in the country. In 1985, Pereira's government made birth control advocacy a priority.
The Cape Verdean government worked under a temporary constitution from 1975 to 1980. Cabral and Pereira maintained their vision of one day uniting Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde as one nation, under the PAIGC. A new constitution written in 1980 reflected this long-term goal. But it was not to be: later that year, Luis Cabral was overthrown by Joao Vieira, who did not share this vision.
A new constitution was written for Cape Verde in 1981. The new document separated the nation from Guinea-Bissau, reflecting that unification was no longer a goal for the two nations. Cape Verde formed its own political party, African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV). Tensions ran high between the two countries for a while, but in 1988, the two heads of state signed a mutual cooperation agreement. Pereira won reelection in Cape Verde in 1981 and 1986.
As African and Eastern European nations adapted multi-party political systems, Pereira did the same for Cape Verde. In September of 1990, legislation was passed to allow a multi-party system and popular presidential elections. No limit was placed on the number of parties that could be registered. In an election held in February of 1991, Pereira was defeated overwhelmingly by António Monteiro.
Awards
Médaille, Ordre du Lyon, Senegal; Mdaille Am'lcar Cabral, Guinea-Bissau; Médaille de Fidélité au Peuple, Republic of Guinea; Grand Cordon of National Order of Southern Cross, Brazil; Agostinho Neto Medal, First Class, Angola; Am'lcar Cabral Medal, First Class, Cape Verde. Honorary doctorate degrees from University of Rhode Island, Sacred Heart of Bridport, U.S.A.; Coimbra, Portugal; Usmane Danfodyo University, Sokoto, Nigeria.
Further Reading
Books
— Brenna Sanchez
| Aristides Pereira | |
|---|---|
| 1st President of Cape Verde | |
| In office 1975–1991 |
|
| Prime Minister | Pedro Pires |
| Succeeded by | António Mascarenhas Monteiro |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 17 November 1923 Boa Vista, Overseas Province of Cabo Verde, Portugal |
| Died | 22 September 2011 (aged 87) Coimbra, Portugal |
| Political party | PAICV |
Aristides Maria Pereira (Portuguese pronunciation: [ɐɾiʃˈtidɨʒ mɐˈɾiɐ pɨˈɾejɾɐ]; November 17, 1923 – September 22, 2011)[1] was the first President of Cape Verde, serving from 1975 to 1991.
Pereira was born on the island of Boa Vista. His first major government job was chief of telecommunications in Guinea-Bissau. From the late 1940s until Cape Verde's independence, Pereira was heavily involved in the anti-colonial movement, organizing strikes and rising through the hierarchy of his party, the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (Partido Africano da Independência da Guiné e Cabo Verde, known as PAIGC). In clandestine activity he often used the pseudonym Alfredo Bangura.
Although Pereira initially promised to lead a democratic and socialist nation upon becoming President, he compounded the country's chronic poverty by crushing dissent following the overthrow of Luís de Almeida Cabral. Cabral was the President of Guinea-Bissau and Pereira's ally in the drive to unite the two Lusophone states. However, Cape Verde had a much better human rights record than most countries in Africa and was known as one of the most democratic (despite the restriction on party activity) because of the power delegated to local citizens' committees. After the coup in Bissau, political repression sharply decreased but the one-party PAICV state established at independence remained until 1990.
The country's policies during Pereira's rule tended toward Cold War nonalignment and economic reforms to help the peasantry. He controversially allied his country with the regimes in China and Libya.
Pedro Pires served as Prime Minister for the duration of Pereira's presidency.
After PAICV decided to introduce multiparty democracy in February 1990, Pereira stepped down as General Secretary of PAICV in July 1990 and was succeeded in that post by Pires. Pereira was the PAICV candidate in the February 1991 presidential election, but António Mascarenhas Monteiro defeated him by a large margin.[2]
The Aristides Pereira International Airport previously, (Rabil Airport) on the Cape Verdean island of Boa Vista, was officially renamed after him on November, 19, 2011.
| Preceded by (none) |
President of Cape Verde 1975–1991 |
Succeeded by António Mascarenhas Monteiro |
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