Eduardo Díez de Medina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eduardo Díez de Medina (8 February 1881 – 27 June 1955),[1][2] was born in La Paz, Bolivia, was Bolivia's Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship on three occasions (1923, 1925, 1936–39). In 1941 Diez de Medina submitted himself to trial after he was accused of selling life-saving Bolivian visas to up to 15,000 Jews in Europe during World War II.

Political career[]

Medina was Bolivia's Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship on three occasions (1923, 1925, 1936–39).

He signed on July 9, 1925 the Carillo-Diez de Medina treaty with Argentine representative , which settled a long border dispute between Argentina and Bolivia. He also negotiated with U.S. Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg a plan to grant Bolivia the city of Arica, thereby granting it access to the sea. The plan, which was to result from an American mediation between Peru and Chile, failed due to a change in U.S. foreign policy following the election of President Herbert Hoover. Diez de Medina also enacted, together with Peruvian emissary , the , which demarcated the border between Bolivia and Peru. In addition, he served as Latin American Liaison to the League of Nations.

In 1941 Diez de Medina fell out of favor amidst a jingoistic political climate when he voluntarily submitted himself to trial after he was accused of selling life-saving Bolivian visas to up to 15,000 Jews in Berlin, Warsaw, Kaunas and Stockholm. Over 1,000 blank immigration permits were found for distribution in Warsaw, Hamburg, Genoa and Paris.

References[]

Specific
  1. ^ Profile of Eduardo Díez de Medina
  2. ^ "Eduardo Diez de Medina". 30 November 2009.


Political offices
Preceded by
Foreign Minister of Bolivia
1923
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Román Paz
Foreign Minister of Bolivia
1925–1926
Succeeded by
Alberto Gutiérrez
Preceded by
Enrique Baldivieso Aparicio
Foreign Minister of Bolivia
1937–1939
Succeeded by
 [es]
Retrieved from ""