- Roberto Díaz Herrera
Roberto Díaz Herrera (born on
June 27 ,1937 ) was aPanama niancolonel under GeneralManuel Noriega and was most famous for his public denunciation of the Panamaniandictator in 1987. After General Noriega placed him underhouse arrest , Col. Díaz received much support from the Panamanian people, with many passing by his house in cars to shake his hand. He was imprisoned shortly thereafter and eventually given political asylum inVenezuela . After spending 11 years of exile in variousLatin America n countries, Díaz returned to Panama. In 2004, he was chosen by the newly elected Panamanianpresident ,Martín Torrijos , to be the country'sambassador toPeru .Biography
Early life
Born seventh of nine siblings in Santiago, the capital city of the Panamanian province of
Veraguas , Roberto Díaz was raised by his parents Anastacio Díaz Jiménez, who was a teacher, and Gregoria Herrera, who worked as a housewife and at a local store selling bread and desserts.At age 15, he studied in
Lima ,Peru , at the Military School of Leoncio Prado, while also attending classes at the Escuela de Oficiales de la Guardia Civil (Official School of the Civil Guard).Military Life
Beginning with a rank of second lieutenant, Roberto Díaz pursued a military career in the only institution of its kind in Panama, Guardia Nacional de Panamá (National Guard of Panama). He rose quickly in rank to colonel and then to General Chief of Staff to the military, which had changed its name to Fuerzas de Defensa de Panamá (Panama Defense Forces). At that time, he was second in command of Panama's military under the command of
Manuel Noriega .In June 1987, in an interview with
Panama 's leading opposition newspaper, "La Prensa", Colonel Díaz made a strong declaration against Noriega. He accused Noriega of drug trafficking, planning the assassination ofOmar Torrijos with the help of theCIA , ordering the killing of Hugo Spadafora, and orchestrating fraud in the 1984 presidential election. These allegations led many people inPanama to protest.Fifty days after the televised interview, Noriega placed Colonel Díaz under house arrest. Many people went to Diaz's house to shake his hand in order to show their support for him. The street to his house was frequently lined with the cars of his supporters.
Despite public support for Colonel Díaz, Noriega ordered his house stormed on
July 27 ,1987 to place him in prison.ref|cidh_stormingdate After spending six months in jail, Díaz was sent into exile onDecember 24 after several countries negotiated his release from prison.Years of exile
At the beginning of his exile from
Panama , Roberto Díaz spent about six years inVenezuela , which granted him political asylum. Later, he spent time inArgentina , and finallyEcuador , whith his wife and his three sons, Daniel Roberto Díaz, Carlos Díaz and Romi Díaz.President of the United States Jimmy Carter and Omar Torrijos of Panama on September 7, 1977, signed Torrijos-Carter Treaties. Díaz Herrera was send by Torrijos as a negotiator of the Panama Canal to many countries, such as
Cuba ,Libya ,France , andYugoslavia . He also served as a political representative inIsrael ,Algeria ,Venezuela ,Mexico , andCosta Rica .Additionally, Roberto Díaz studied at the ULACIT in Panama where he earned a law degree.
He is the Ambassador of Panama and Consul of Callao in Perú.
Return to political influence
In 2004,
Martín Torrijos , a second nephew of Roberto Díaz, was elected president ofPanama and chose Díaz to serve as ambassador toPeru .ee also
*
Operation Just Cause References
* [http://www.cidh.oas.org/countryrep/Panama89eng/intro.htm Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Website]
Notes
#Note|cidh_stormingdate Inter-American Commission on Human Rights website
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