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Miguel Guerra

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El Revolucionario
Miguel Guerra
Fidel Castro Montreal 1959 1 (cropped).jpg
President of Montilla
In office
15 November 1960 – 14 November 2000
Vice PresidentEduardo Velázquez (1960-1981)
Álvaro Santana (1981-1990)
Diego Villa Simarro (1990-2000)
Preceded byProvisional Government (acting)
Succeeded byDiego Villa Simarro
Personal details
Born26 February 1920
Cabalgata del Ángel, Tierra Alta, Montilla
Died11 September 2010(2010-09-11) (aged 90)
Guaitiao, Montilla
Political partyCommunist Party of Montilla
Other political
affiliations
Workers' and Peasants' Party of Montilla (1939-1943)
Montillan Revolutionary Movement (1950-1957)
Nicknames
  • El Serrano
  • El Buen Doctor
  • Trueno
  • El Guerrillero
Military service
AllegianceMontilla Montilla
Branch/serviceMontilla Army revolution.png Revolutionary Armed Forces
Years of service1952-2002
RankJefe General
Battles/wars1945 Yanagua rebellion
Montillan Revolution

Miguel Jorge Rodríguez Guerra (26 February 1920 - 11 September 2010) was a Montillan revolutionary and politician who served as president of Montilla from 1960 to 2000. Miguel was ideologically a Marxist-Leninist communist, one of the founders of the Communist Party of Montilla and its first General Secretary. His administration saw Montilla become a one-party socialist state; the expropriation, collectivization and nationalization of industries and business; along with the implementation of socialist and communist reforms.

Miguel Guerra was born in Cabalgata del Ángel (today Presidente Guerra) to a family of peasants, Guerra went on to study medicine in the University of Guaitiao, where he adopted leftist and socialist ideas after becoming involved in the student movement. He became the leader of the student wing of the Workers' and Peasants' Party of Montilla after successfully leading anti-renovationalist student strikes in 1941, and becomes one of the main faces of the party by 1943. After the Guaitiazo in 1945, Guerra and a group of supporters mounted a failed rebellion in Yanagua, resulting in the group's exile. Upon arrival in Sukong, Guerra formed the Montillan Revolutionary Movement alongside Eduardo Velazquéz and the Manzanedo twins with support from the communist government, which provided the group with training. Guerra and the MRM return in 1952 and fight a successful guerilla war from Yanagua against the government. After the deposition of Leonardo Murillo, Guerra assumed political and military control as president, which he remained as until 2000.

Early life and career

Youth: 1920-1939

Student Movement: 1939-1943

Medical Career and Politics: 1943-1945

Montillan Revolution

Revolutionary Movement and the Yanagua Rebellion: 1945

Exile in Sukong: 1946-1952

Guerilla War: 1952-1958

Provisional Government: 1959-1960

Presidency

Nationalization and Collectivization: 1960-1962

Programa de Desarrollo Rápido: 1962-1970