Abílio Duarte
Abílio Duarte | |
---|---|
Foreign Minister of Cape Verde | |
In office 1975–1981 | |
President | National Assembly of Cape Verde |
In office 1975–1991 | |
President | Aristides Pereira |
Succeeded by | Amílcar Spencer Lopes |
Personal details | |
Born | Praia, Santiago Island, Portuguese Cape Verde | 16 February 1931
Died | 20 August 1996 | (aged 65)
Political party | PAICV |
Occupation | Politician |
Abílio Augusto Monteiro Duarte (16 February 1931 – 20 August 1996) was a Cape Verdean nationalist and early political leader in the independence era.
Biography
He was born in Praia, at the time colonial capital of Cape Verde.[1]
He was educated at
He took part in resistance of colonial rule starting in 1953 and wrote articles related to nationalism including the review Claridade. In February 1956, along with other writers from Angola and Mozambique, he took part in the First Congress of Black Writers in Paris. In, 1957, he went to Dakar, Senegal with the militants helping their independence movement in Senegal, later he visited Bissau together with other nationalists. He worked with and was later married to Dulce Almada.[2]
After Cape Verde became independent, Duarte was the President
He died in August 1996.
Legacy
One of the streets named in Cape Verde is the one in the south of Mindelo.
A secondary school is named after him in Palmarejo in the southwest of Praia located on Avenida Santo Antão, opened in the mid-1990s. Adjacent is the main campus of the University of Cape Verde
References
Further reading
- Richard Andrew Lobban et Paul Khalil Saucier, Historical dictionary of the Republic of Cape Verde, Lanham, Md, Scarecrow Press, coll. Historical Dictionaries of Africa, 2007, 4th ed., 306 pages. OCLC 73926942, « Abílio Augusto Monteiro Duarte », p. 87-88
External links
- Abílio Augusto Monteiro Duarte at the National Assembly of Cape Verde website (in Portuguese)
- Short biography at rulers.org