Yehude Simon

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Yehude Simon
Yehude Simon Munaro.JPG
Member of Congress
Assumed office
26 July 2011
Constituency Lambayeque
Second Vice President of Congress
In office
26 July 2011 – 26 July 2012
President Daniel Abugattás
Succeeded by Juan Carlos Eguren
Prime Minister of Peru
In office
14 October 2008 – 11 July 2009
President Alan García
Preceded by Jorge del Castillo
Succeeded by Javier Velásquez
1st Governor of Lambayeque
In office
1 January 2003 – 9 March 2009
Lieutenant Nery Saldarriaga
Preceded by Office Created
Succeeded by Nery Saldarriaga (Interim)
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
26 July 1985 – 26 July 1990
Personal details
Born (1947-07-18) 18 July 1947 (age 76)
Lima, Peru
Political party Humanist Movement Party
Spouse(s) Nancy Valcárcel
Alma mater Pedro Ruiz Gallo State University

Yehude Simon Munaro (born 18 July 1947) is a Peruvian politician (PHP) and former Prime Minister of Peru.

Early life and family

Born in Lima to a family of Jewish and Italian descent,[1] Simon's family moved to the city of Chiclayo to establish a shoe retail business. After completing his early education at the Colegio Manuel Pardo, he joined the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at the Universidad Nacional Pedro Ruiz Gallo, in the city of Lambayeque, where he later was a lecturer. He married Nancy Valcárcel, a Chiclayo painter with whom he had four children: Jessica, Yehuda, and Yusef Yail and four grandchildren: David, Micaela, Joaquín and Isabella.

Beginning in politics: 1980s

Yehuda Simon began his political activity in 1983, when he applied for the post of Mayor of prosperous Chiclayo by the party United Left, and was placed second. In 1985 he applied to the Chamber of Deputies by United Left, was elected MP for Lambayeque (1985-1990), integrating the Committees on Justice and Human Rights Congress.

In 1991, he founded the Free Patriotic Movement, who was accused of being the legal wing of the MRTA (Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement) rebel movement, famous for the 1996 Japanese embassy hostage crisis in Lima. On April 5, 1992, Simon was in Europe, participating in conferences. Upon learning of the breakdown of the constitutional President Alberto Fujimori he returned to Peru and decided to participate in the protest against the closure of the Congress of Peru.

Imprisonment

On June 11, 1992 he was arrested along with other leaders of Patria Libre, and accused of being a subversive. Later that year he was sentenced by the judiciary to 20 years of imprisonment for the crime of "glorification of terrorism." During his 8 and a half years in prison, human rights organizations, Amnesty International, some media and some opposition Peruvian politicians demanded that the Fujimori regime pardon him.

Post-imprisonment: governor and Prime Minister

After being cleared of all charges,[citation needed] Simon served as governor of the prosperous Lambayeque Region.

Since July 2008 he has been the president of the moderate center-left Peruvian Humanist Party.

On 14 October 2008, Simon was sworn in as President of the Peruvian Minister Cabinet, a position akin to that of a Prime Minister.[2][3][4][5] President Alan García had appointed Simon, who is politically to the left of García, in an effort to mollify the country's poor and nationalists who are considered "hard-line leftists" by the right-wing Peruvian parties.[2] [3][4][5][6][6]

Resignation

In June 2009, Simon announced that he would resign as prime minister "in the coming weeks", following violence over the land rights of Amazon Indians.[7] He resigned on 10 July 2009 and was replaced on 12 July 2009 by Ángel Javier Velásquez Quesquén.

Simon went on to apologize to the indigenous people, acknowledging the government had not properly consulted with the Amazon Indians prior to passing ten controversial laws, designed to ease foreign companies in the exploration of the Amazon for oil, gas and lumber. Simon pledged to work to persuade the Peruvian congress to repeal these controversial laws. Peru's indigenous leaders had launched protest strikes and blockades in April 2009; resulting in 34 persons killed, including 23 policemen; in bloody clashes between the Amazon Indians and the Peruvian police.[8][9]

Congressman

In the general election, 2011 Simon was elected Congressman for Lambayeque on the list of the Alliance for the Great Change to which Simon's Humanist Party has integrated.

References

Article drawn primarily from Spanish-language Wikipedia entry of same name

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Peru
2008–2009
Succeeded by
Javier Velásquez