Miguel Ángel Burelli Rivas


Miguel Ángel Burelli Rivas, was a Venezuelan lawyer, diplomat and politician, presidential candidate in 1968 and 1973. He was Director General of the Ministry of Interior Affairs; and also Minister of Justice and Minister of Foreign Affairs, between 1994 and 1999. He was a candidate to be Secretary of the Organization of American States in 1994.

Biography

Burelli Rivas, was born in La Puerta, Venezuela. His father's ancestors came in the XIX century from the Italian island of Elba.
He graduated as lawyer with a post-graduate degree in Political Sciences in University of Florence and a post-graduate degree in Law from the University of Madrid, Spain. Miguel Angel Burelli spoke fluently Italian, English, French, Portuguese and of course Spanish.
He was forced into exile in Spain in the mid-1950s under Marcos Pérez Jiménez. There he married María Briceño Picón, daughter of writer & politician Mario Briceño Iragorry.
He served as Director of the National Electoral Council ; Minister of Justice; Ambassador of Venezuela to the United States; Ambassador of Venezuela to Colombia; Ambassador of Venezuela to the United Kingdom. He successively ran for the Presidency of the Republic. He was President of the Commission in charge of organizing the Third United Nations Conference on Maritime Law and also author of several famous books. He was a member of the Advisory Committee of the Foreign Affairs Ministry and Foreign Minister of Venezuela.
Miguel Angel Burelli also served as Director of the National Electoral Council ; Minister of Justice; Ambassador of Venezuela to the United States and to Colombia & the United Kingdom.
He was Director General of the Ministry of Interior Affairs and -under the presidency of Rafael Caldera- was Minister of Foreign Affairs of Venezuela in 1994-1999.
Miguel Angel Burelli was author of several books:
Afirmación de Venezuela: itinerario de una inquietud, La democracia en América Latina: frustraciones y perspectivas, Caricatura de democracia, Versiones y pasiones, De la integración andina, El asilo como derecho.
After his death were published: Biografía del Cardenal Quintero and En Primera Persona, his autobiography edited in 2009.
He was a member of the Advisory Committee of the Foreign Affairs Ministry and worked successfully in Latin America when Foreign Minister of Venezuela.

Personal life and death

After retiring from politics, he died peacefully on 10/22/2003 in Washington, D.C., USA, after suffering from lung cancer and cerebral hemorrhage.