Name | Horacio Serpa Uribe |
---|---|
Office | Governor of Santander |
Term start | January 1, 2008 |
Predecessor | Hugo Heliodoro Aguilar Naranjo |
Ambassador from2 | Colombia |
Country2 | OAS |
Term start2 | March 10, 2003 |
Term end2 | September 24, 2004 |
President2 | Álvaro Uribe Vélez |
Predecessor2 | Humberto de la Calle Lombana |
Successor2 | Alvaro Tirado Mejía |
Order3 | 1st |
Office3 | Ministry of the Interior and JusticeMinister of the Interior |
Term start3 | 1994 |
Term end3 | 1997 |
President3 | Ernesto Samper Pizano |
Predecessor3 | Fabio Villegas Ramírez |
Successor3 | Carlos Holmes Trujillo García |
Office4 | Co-President of theConstituent Assembly of Colombia |
Term start4 | February 5, 1991 |
Term end4 | July 4, 1991 |
Alongside4 | Álvaro Gómez Hurtado and Antonio Navarro Wolff |
Predecessor5 | * Office created |
Successor5 | * Office abolished |
Office6 | Inspector General of Colombia |
Term start6 | 1988 |
Term end6 | 1989 |
President6 | Virgilio Barco Vargas |
Successor6 | Alfonso Gómez Méndez |
Office7 | Minister of Government |
Term start7 | 1990 |
Term end7 | 1990 |
President7 | Virgilio Barco Vargas |
Predecessor7 | Carlos A Lemos Simmonds |
Successor7 | Julio César Sánchez García |
Office8 | Senator of Colombia |
Term start8 | 1985 |
Term end8 | 1988 |
Office9 | Member of theColombian Chamber of Representatives |
Term start9 | 1974 |
Term end9 | 1985 |
Predecessor9 | Rogelio Ayala |
Constituency9 | Santander |
Birth date | January 04, 1943 |
Birth place | Bucaramanga, Santander, Colombia |
Nationality | Colombian |
Spouse | Rosita Moncada (m. 1974) |
Children | Sandra Serpa MoncadaRosita Serpa MoncadaHoracio Serpa Moncada |
Alma mater | University of Atlantico |
Profession | Lawyer, politician |
Party | Liberal |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Footnotes | }} |
Horacio Serpa Uribe (born 3 January 1943) is a Colombian politician and lawyer. Horacio Serpa has run as the Colombian Liberal Party candidate for President of Colombia on three occasions; in 1998, 2002, and 2006. He previously served as congressman for Santander as Senator, Inspector General of Colombia, president of the National Constituent Assembly, Minister of the Interior, and as Ambassador of Colombia to the Organization of American States. He was also involved in the 8000 process scandal in which money from the Cali Cartel entered the presidential campaign of Liberal candidate Ernesto Samper. In 2007 Serpa ran for the governorship of Santander Department and was elected on October, 28 in the Colombian regional elections.
Serpa concentrated his political efforts in the Magdalena medio (Middle Magdalena Region), a convulsioned region in which the ELN guerrilla was born. In 1970 Serpa was appointed Mayor of Barrancabermeja by Alfonso Gómez Gómez and later became Secretary of Education for the Santander Department.
In the legislative branch Serpa served as councilman for the town of Barrancabermeja and later as National Chamber of Representatives representing Santander Department as replacement for congressman Rogelio Ayala in 1974. Serpa was reelected for the periods of 1978 and 1982 under a movement founded by him, the Authentic Liberal Leftist Front (Frente de Izquierda Liberal Auténtico, FILA) aligned with the official Liberal party.
In the Chamber of Representatives Serpa became President of the Accusations Commission and President of the Congress of the Republic Plan Commission. In 1985 Serpa ran for the senate and was elected. In 1998 Serpa was appointed Inspector General of Colombia. He also served as Minister of Government, Minister of Interior, Presidential Peace Advisor and Ministry Delegate in Presidential Functions during the Liberal presidencies of Virgilio Barco (1986–1990) and Ernesto Samper (1994–1998).
Serpa was later elected for the National Constituent Assembly in 1991 in which he shared a collegiate presidency with Antonio Navarro Wolff (former member of the M-19 guerrilla) and Álvaro Gómez Hurtado (representative of the Conservative Party) to create the Colombian Constitution of 1991.
After the creation of the new constitution Serpa continued as President of Liberal Directorate in the Santander Department and President of the Central Politics Commission of the Liberal Party. He was then prospect for presidential candidate in 1998, but was shaded by Ernesto Samper. Serpa was then elected National Director of the Liberal party for the period 1998 - 1999. During the government of Álvaro Uribe, Serpa was appointed ambassador of Colombia to the Organization of American States (OAS) with he also disputed the presidential bids of 2002 and 2006.
In 1981 Serpa met Ernesto Samper Pizano who was working as debate chief of Alfonso López Michelsen's second presidential campaign and became good friends. For the presidential campaign of 1990 Samper became a candidate and Serpa collaborated with his efforts in the Santander Department, his region of influence, while being the leader of his movement: the FILA. But Samper failed the elections.
In the 1994 elections Serpa became Debate Chief of Samper's presidential campaign and this time Samper was elected president of Colombia. Pm June 20, 1994 the opposing presidential candidate Andrés Pastrana then made public the "Narcocassettes" a series of telephone recordings in which members of the Cali drug cartel mainly journalist Alberto Giraldo talked with Gilberto and Miguel Rodríguez Orejuela regarding the financing of the Samper campaign for the presidency.
The Supreme Court of Colombia then opened an investigation which was dubbed the "Proceso 8000". Serpa defended Samper against these allegations of drug money entering the campaign in which he was also involved. The relations with the United States government a major contributor to the drug effort in Colombia, deteriorated. Samper and most of his collaborators were absolved from any wrong doing with the exception of Fernando Botero and Santiago Medina. But the scandal involved a dozen representatives of the Colombian congress and numerous politicians and businessman with the Cali cartel. After this incident Serpa's credibility maintained a low margin within Colombians for supporting Samper, as well as responding to criticism with aggravating words.
During the government of Virgilio Barco, Serpa was appointed Minister of Government in which he collaborated in setting a demobilization timetable for the EPL, the PRT and the Quintín Lame Movement. In 1992 under the government of César Gaviria Serpa led the failed negotiation attempts with the ELN guerrilla in Tlaxcala, Mexico.
During the government of Samper, Serpa intended to negotiate with the FARC guerrilla. The terrorist group asked for the demilitarization of La Uribe, Meta a region in central Colombia, but were unsuccessful. Serpa opposed to the CONVIVIR groups created by Fernando Botero, a group of self-defense groups intended to improve security in areas were the government couldn't reach. Despite his opposition the plan of the CONVIVIR was approved. He then traveled to Bonn, Germany where the Colombian government and local government of Bonn were again trying to negotiate with the ELN guerrilla, but this peace talks also failed.
This elections were won by Álvaro Uribe by a majority vote of half plus one vote, which according to the Colombian Constitution of 1991 made a secondary election unnecessary. After these negative results for his political career Serpa said that he would never run for the presidency ever again. Few years later he changed his position and after quiting his post as ambassador of Colombia to the Organization of American States (OAS), he decided to run again for the presidency. In 2005 he was appointed vice-president of the Socialist International.
On March 12, 2006 Serpa was selected as candidate for the Colombian Liberal Party for the presidency of Colombia.
Category:1943 births Category:Living people Category:People from Santander Department Category:Governors of the Department of Santander Category:Colombian judges Category:Colombian lawyers Category:Mayors of places in Colombia Category:Colombian Ministers of the Interior Category:Colombian Ministers of Government Category:Colombian political scientists Category:Colombian Roman Catholics Category:Inspectors General of Colombia Category:Colombian Liberal Party politicians Category:Members of the Chamber of Representatives of Colombia Category:Members of the Senate of Colombia Category:Permanent Representatives of Colombia to the Organization of American States
de:Horacio Serpa es:Horacio Serpa Uribe fr:Horacio Serpa UribeThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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