Mireya Baltra

Mireya Baltra Moreno

Mireya Baltra Moreno
1 Councillor
In office
1963–1969
2 Deputy (legislator)
In office
1969  21 September 1973
Constituency Santiago, 1st and 4th districts
3 Minister of Labour and Social Welfare
In office
17 June 1972  2 November 1972
President Salvador Allende
Preceded by José Oyarce
Succeeded by Luis Figueroa Mazuela
Personal details
Born (1932-02-25) February 25, 1932
Santiago de Chile
Nationality Chilean
Political party Communist Party of Chile
Parents José Baltra Baltra, María Moreno Cabezas
Occupation politician, journalist


Mireya Baltra Moreno (born Santiago de Chile, February 25, 1932) is a Chilean sociologist, journalist and politician, a member of the Communist Party of Chile. She has been a deputy and a councillor for Santiago, and served as Minister of Labour and Social Welfare under Salvador Allende.[1]

Biography

Family and childhood

She was the daughter of José Baltra Baltra and María Moreno Cabezas, newsvendors in the centre of Santiago. Her father was a member of the Radical Party.[1]

Studies and earlier career

She attended school at the Liceo Manuel de Salas and the Liceo N° 5 de Niñas. From childhood onward she helped her parents at their news kiosk in central Santiago. In 1957 she set up as a newsvendor on her own account, with another kiosk which she described as her “own viewpoint for social observation”.[1]

She also worked as a reporter for Vea magazine from 1948 to 1950, and as a columnist for the newspaper El Siglo from 1960 to 1964, her first article being "La mujer como fuerza política (Women as a political force)". She also wrote for El Espectador and Las Noticias de Última Hora.

As a newsvendor she joined the journalists' union, and was elected head of the women's section and promoted to the National Federation of Journalists. Then in 1962 she joined the leadership of the Central Única de Trabajadores de Chile (CUT) (national council of labour unions).[1]

Political career

Mireya Baltra with Salvador Allende.

In 1963 she was elected to the Santiago council, and was re-elected in 1967. In 1969 she was elected deputy for the 1st district within Santiago. [2] In June 1972 she resigned her position as deputy on being appointed by President Allende as Minister of Labour and Social Welfare, a post she held until 2 November.[2][3] In the March 1973 elections she was re-elected as deputy, this time for the 4th district, and held this position until the military coup on 11 September of that year.[4]

Asylum and exile

Within a few days of the coup, the new dictatorship issued decrees under which Mireya Baltra, together with other prominent women in the Popular Unity government, were ordered to report to the Defence Ministry under threats of “facing the consequences” if they refused. The leadership of the Communist party decided to seek asylum in the Dutch embassy.[5] Together with others including Gladys Marín, secretary-general of the Young Communists,[5] senator Julieta Campusano, and Orlando Millas, finance minister in Allende's government, they remained in asylum at the embassy for nine months.

In 1974 she went into exile, first in the Netherlands and later in Czechoslovakia.[5] In Prague she became secretary-general of the international trade union body formed to express solidarity with Chilean workers. After nine years she travelled to Cuba and became executive secretary of the Continental Women's Front against the coup, working with Vilma Espín de Castro, president of the Cuban Women's Federation.

Return to Chile

Mireya Baltra and Michelle Bachelet

In 1987 she and Julieta Campusano re-entered Chile clandestinely, crossing the Andes on horseback, accompanied by drovers and Argentine Communist leaders.[5] She had previously tried to enter Chile with other exiles: two attempts in planes, which were turned back to Argentina; and also through the Cuevas tunnel between Argentina and Chile, when twenty-one Chilean exiles were arrested, beaten and sent back to Argentina by agents of the CNI and the Carabineros de Chile.

Now on arrival in Chile, Baltra and Campusano presented themselves at the court of justice with the lawyers Enrique Krauss and Jaime Castillo Velasco, who claimed habeas corpus for the women. The military regime sent them away: Campusano to Camiña in the north of the country, and Baltra to Aysén in the south.[6]

She returned to Santiago and joined the struggle against the military dictatorship. She was arrested after a secret press conference. She was given a prison sentence under state security laws and for illicit association.

In the 1990s, still with the support of the Communist Party, she tried to return to parliament in the elections for deputy in 1993 and senator in 1997; but was defeated in both contests.[7] At present she is a member of the editorial board of Crónica digital: información para cada día (Digital daily news), contributing articles on current political topics and historical subjects.[8]

References

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