Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.


Perez de Cuellar, Two-term UN Chief From Peru, Dies at 100

Associated Press

   LIMA, PERU - Javier Perez de Cuellar, the two-term United Nations
   secretary-general who brokered a historic cease-fire between Iran and
   Iraq in 1988 and who in later life came out of retirement to help
   re-establish democracy in his Peruvian homeland, has died. He was 100.

   His son, Francisco Perez de Cuellar, said his father died Wednesday at
   home of natural causes. Current U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
   called the Peruvian diplomat a "personal inspiration."

   "Mr. Perez de Cuellar's life spanned not only a century but also the
   entire history of the United Nations, dating back to his participation
   in the first meeting of the General Assembly in 1946," said Guterres in
   a statement late Wednesday.

   Perez de Cuellar's death ends a long diplomatic career that brought him
   full circle from his first posting as secretary at the Peruvian embassy
   in Paris in 1944 to his later job as Peru's ambassador to France.

   When he began his tenure as U.N. secretary-general on Jan. 1, 1982, he
   was a little-known Peruvian who was a compromise candidate at a time
   when the United Nations was held in low esteem.

   Serving as U.N. undersecretary-general for special political affairs,
   he emerged as the dark horse candidate in December 1981 after a
   six-week election deadlock between U.N. chief Kurt Waldheim and
   Tanzanian Foreign Minister Salim Ahmed Salim.

   Once elected, he quickly made his mark.

   Shaking the UN house

   Disturbed by the United Nations' dwindling effectiveness, he sought to
   revitalize the world body's faulty peacekeeping machinery.

   His first step was to "shake the house" with a highly critical report
   in which he warned: "We are perilously near to a new international
   anarchy."

   With the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and with conflicts raging in
   Afghanistan and Cambodia and between Iran and Iraq, he complained to
   the General Assembly that U.N. resolutions "are increasingly defied or
   ignored by those that feel themselves strong enough to do so."

   During his decade as U.N. chief, Perez de Cuellar would earn a
   reputation more for diligent, quiet diplomacy than charisma.

   "He has an amiable look about him that people mistake for through and
   through softness," said an aide, who described him as tough and
   courageous.

   Quiet diplomacy

   Faced early in his first term with a threatened U.S. cutoff of funds in
   the event of Israel's ouster, he worked behind the scenes to stop Arab
   efforts to deprive the Jewish state of its General Assembly seat. There
   was muted criticism from the Arab camp that he had given the Americans
   the right of way in the Middle East.

   In dealing with human rights issues, he chose the path of "discreet
   diplomacy." He refrained from publicly rebuking Poland for refusing to
   allow his special representative into the country to investigate
   allegations of human rights violations during the Warsaw regime's 1982
   crackdown on the Solidarity trade union movement.

   He came back for a second term after a groundswell of support for his
   candidacy, including a conversation with President Ronald Reagan, who
   -- in the words of the U.N. chief's spokesman -- expressed "his
   personal support for the secretary-general."

   "Just about all the Western countries have told him they'd like to see
   him stay on," a Western diplomatic source said at the time. "There is
   no visible alternative."

   Unlike his predecessor, Kurt Waldheim who was regarded as a
   "workaholic" and who spent long hours in his office, Perez de Cuellar
   liked to get away from it all.

   "He is very jealous of his own privacy," a close aide said.

   "When I can, I read everything but United Nations documents," Perez de
   Cuellar confided to a reporter. Once on a flight to Moscow, an aide
   observed that "in the midst of it all, the secretary-general had time
   for splendid literature."

   Trilingual, Perez de Cuellar read French, English and Spanish
   literature.

   Lebanon hostages

   Perez de Cuellar spent much of his second term working behind the
   scenes on the hostage issue, resulting in the release of Westerners
   held in Lebanon, including the last and longest held American hostage,
   journalist Terry Anderson, who was freed Dec. 4, 1991.

   All told, Perez de Cuellar's diplomacy helped bring an end to fighting
   in Cambodia and the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, and the withdrawal of Soviet
   troops from Afghanistan.

   Shortly after midnight on Jan. 1, 1992, he walked out of U.N.
   headquarters to his waiting limousine, no longer the secretary-general,
   but having attained his final goal after hours of tough negotiations: a
   peace pact between the Salvadoran government and leftist rebels.

   "Mr. Perez de Cuellar played a crucial role in a number of diplomatic
   successes, including the independence of Namibia, an end to the
   Iran-Iraq War, the release of American hostages held in Lebanon, the
   peace accord in Cambodia and, in his very last days in office, a
   historic peace agreement in El Salvador," Guterres said.

   Became diplomat 1944

   Javier Perez de Cuellar was born in Lima on Jan. 19, 1920. His father a
   "modest businessman," was an accomplished amateur pianist, according to
   the former secretary-general. The family traced its roots to the
   Spanish town of Cuellar, north of Segovia.

   In Peru, the family belonged to the educated rather than the landowning
   class.

   He received a law degree from Lima's Catholic University in 1943 and
   joined the Peruvian diplomatic service a year later. He would go on to
   postings in France, Britain, Bolivia and Brazil before returning to
   Lima in 1961, where he served in a number of high-level ministry posts.

   He was ambassador to Switzerland and then became Peru's first
   ambassador to the Soviet Union while concurrently accredited to Poland.
   Other assignments included the post of secretary-general of the
   Peruvian Foreign Ministry and chief delegate to the United Nations.

   After leaving the U.N., Perez de Cuellar made an unsuccessful bid for
   Peru's presidency in 1995 against the authoritarian leader Alberto
   Fujimori, whose 10-year autocratic regime crumbled in November 2000
   amid corruption scandals.

   At the age of 80, Perez de Cuellar emerged from retirement in Paris and
   returned to Peru to take on the mantle of foreign minister and cabinet
   chief for provisional President Valentin Paniagua.

   His impeccable democratic credentials lent credibility to an interim
   government whose mandate was to deliver free and fair elections. Eight
   months later, newly elected President Alejandro Toledo asked him to
   serve as Ambassador to France.

   Between foreign assignments, he was professor of diplomatic law at the
   Academia Diplomatica del Peru and of international relations at the
   Peruvian Academy for Air Warfare.

   At UN in 1975

   Transferring to the United Nations in 1975, he was appointed by
   Waldheim as the secretary-general's special representative in Cyprus.
   During his two years on the divided island he helped to promote
   intercommunal peace talks between Greek and Turkish Cypriots.

   After a brief stint as Peru's ambassador to Venezuela, he returned to
   the United Nations in 1979 as undersecretary-general for special
   political affairs. In that capacity, he undertook delicate diplomatic
   missions to Indochina and Afghanistan.

   Perez de Cuellar resigned his U.N. post in May 1981, just before the
   election campaign for U.N. secretary-general heated up, and returned to
   the Peruvian diplomatic service.

   President Fernando Belaunde Terry recommended Perez de Cuellar for
   nomination as U.N. secretary-general.

   Perez de Cuellar married the former Marcela Temple. He had a son,
   Francisco, and a daughter, Cristina, by a previous marriage.

   His funeral will be Friday.