Diego Arria | |
---|---|
President of the United Nations Security Council | |
In office 1 March 1992 – 31 March 1992 |
|
Permanent Representative of Venezuela in the United Nations | |
In office 11 March 1991 – August 1993 |
|
President | Carlos Andrés Pérez |
Succeeded by | Adolfo Raul Taylhardat |
Minister of Information and Tourism | |
In office February 1977 – 17 March 1978 |
|
President | Carlos Andrés Pérez |
Succeeded by | Celestino Armas |
Governor of Caracas, Capital District | |
In office 15 March 1974 – February 1977 |
|
President | Carlos Andrés Pérez |
Preceded by | Guillermo Alvarez Bajarez |
Succeeded by | Manuel Montilla Caceres |
President of the Corporación Nacional de Hotelería y Turismo (CONAHOTU) | |
In office 12 March 1969 – 2 February 1974 |
|
President | Rafael Caldera |
Personal details | |
Born |
Caracas, Venezuela |
8 October 1938
Nationality | Venezuela |
Relations | Divorced 2012 |
Alma mater | University of Michigan |
Religion | Catholic |
Diego Enrique Arria Salicetti (born 8 October 1938 - Caracas, Venezuela), is a Venezuelan politician, diplomat, former Venezuelan Permanent Representative of Venezuela to the United Nations (1991–1993) and President of the Security Council (March 1992). He was Governor of the Federal District of Caracas in the mid-1970s. Other positions have included Diplomatic Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and Visiting Scholar at Columbia University. Arria was also a critic of former President of Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, and denounced him at the International Criminal Court at the Hague for crimes against humanity. Chávez died before the court judged his case.
Arria was schooled partly in Caracas and partly at the Augusta Military Academy at Fort Defiance, Virginia. He obtained a degree in economics and political science from the University of Michigan. Arria worked for the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, D.C. until he returned to Venezuela in 1969, initially as Director of Tourism in Rafael Caldera's Ministry of Development, and later as president of the CONAHOTU (National Corporation of Hotels and Tourism), and president of Venezuelan Tourism Corporation.
Arria resigned as head of Venezuela Tourism Corporation to create the political movement Causa Común (Common Cause) that later supported the presidential candidacy of Carlos Andrés Pérez (CAP). In 1973, Arria was elected member of the National Congress, representing the state of Miranda. Shortly after CAP was elected in March 1974, he appointed Arria Governor of the Federal District (Caracas), at a time when this was one of the most important presidential appointments. In 1976 when he was Governor of the Federal District he went to Chile to negotiate with President Pinochet the release of his friend Orlando Letelier, his colleague at the Inter American Development Bank in D.C. Pinochet released Letelier, but soon after, Letelier was murdered with a car bomb in Washington D.C by Pinochet's order. Arria intervened again by bringing Leterlier's body to be buried in Caracas, where he remained until the end of Pinochet's rule. He subsequently moved from the governorship to become Minister of Information and Tourism in February 1977. He resigned on 17 March 1978, in order to stand as an independent candidate in the Venezuelan presidential election, 1978. As part of his campaign he published two books: "Primero La Gente" ("The People First") and "Dedicación a una Causa" ("Dedication to a Cause").