Carlos Galvão de Melo


Carlos Galvão de Melo was a Portuguese military officer from the Portuguese Air Force.

Life

Galvão de Melo was the eldest of nine children of António Augusto Ferreira de Melo, a merchant based in Mozambqiue, and wife Cecília Rosa Teles de Noronha Galvão. He joined the Portuguese Air Force in 1942 and trained in the United Kingdom and France. Between 1951 and 1954 he was posted at the NATO joint command headquarters, while between 1954 and 1957 he was posted in Goa to supervise the construction of Dabolim Air Port. Subsequently he commanded the Fifteenth Squadron 'Reyes', based in Porto, and the Eleventh Bomber Regiment based in Angola. Later he was Military Attache to South Africa from 1966 to 1970, and served as Military Attache to Brazil. In 1973 he became Commander of the Second Home Front Division.
When on 25 April 1974 the Carnation Revolution broke out in Portugal, deposing Marcelo Caetano and overthrowing the Estado Novo, Galvão de Melo joined the National Salvation Junta that took power. Nevertheless he soon became known as one of the most conservative members of the Junta. Often seen as a far-right politician, in 1980 he stood as a presidential candidate, but on that occasion he obtained less than 1% of the total popular vote. Fourteen years later, he attracted controversy because of his quoted newspaper remarks which defended the 1975 Indonesian annexation of East Timor.
Galvão de Melo was married twice, firstly to Maria João Vieira das Neves and secondly to Sybille Schön , without issue. From his first marriage he had six children.