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Contemporary Time Line until 2000 1910 – 1917 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 – 1934 1916 – 1922 1916 1917 1919 1922 1924 1925 1926 – 1929 1926 1929 1930 1932 1933 1934 1938 1939 1943 1944 Mexican Revolution Madero elected president of Mexico Universal male suffrage granted in Argentina; the U.S. military intervenes in Nicaragua and stay until 1925 Madero killed (murdered) Panama Canal opens United States occupies Haiti U.S. Marines occupy Dominican Republic Hipólito Yrigoyen, leader of the Unión Cívica Radical (UCR, Radicals), elected president of Argentina; workers compensation laws passed in Chile Chile passes employer liability laws; Venustiano Carranza assumes presidency in Mexico; a new constitution is written; U.S. military intervenes in Cuba; Puerto Rico is legally annexed to the United States; Puerto Ricans given U.S. citizenship Chile passes retirement system for railway workers in the same year that 100,000 workers march past the presidential palace; Emiliano Zapata murdered Communist party formed in Brazil; oil found in Venezuela Military junta in Chile; Alianza Popular Revolucionaria Americana (APRA) formed by Victor Raúl Haya de la Torre Augusto César Sandino returns to Nicaragua to fight with Liberals; begins guerrilla war against newly occupying U.S. forces Mexican Church suspends worship protesting state harassment; many priests and civilians killed in the Cristero rebellion Democratic party formed in São Paulo, Brazil Ecuador the first Latin American country to grant suffrage to women On September 6, the military of Argentina overthrows the Yrigoyen government; October coup in Brazil; Getúlio Vargas takes over the government Brazil and Uruguay grant suffrage to women; Chaco War begins between Bolivia and Paraguay; Paraguay gains more territory; uprising in El Salvador is brutally repressed in “la Matanza” U.S. troops leave Nicaragua; Anatasio Somoza begins to take power; U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt announces “Good Neighbor Policy” Lázaro Cardenas becomes president of Mexico; during his term he redistributes 44 million acres of land to landless Mexicans; Sandino murdered. Mexican oil industry nationalized under Cardenas El Salvador grants suffrage to women Juan Domingo Perón and other military officers take over in Argentina Democratic Revolution in Guatemala 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1952 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 – 1965 1962 1963 1964 1965 Modern democratic era begins in Venezuela with takeover by APRAinspired Acción Democrática , led Rómulio Betacourt; Guatemala and Panama grant women suffrage Juan Perón elected president of Argentina; Eva “Evita” Duarte Perón becomes first lady Argentina and Venezuela grant women’s suffrage José Figueres and APRA – inspired Liberación National party lead reformist revolution in Costa Rica and establish modern democratic social welfare state; Costa Rican army banned by its new constitution; Bogotazo in Colombia; La Violencia begins Chile and Costa Rica grant women’s suffrage Evita Perón dies of cancer, Fulgencio Batista takes direct power in Cuba; Puerto Rico becomes a commonwealth of the United States; Marcos Pérez Jiménez stages a coup in Venezuela, initiating a dictatorship that lasts until 1958; Bolivia grants women’s suffrage; Bolivian revolution led by Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario (MNR) and Victor Paz Estenssoro Alfrado Stroessner takes over as president of Paraguay; rules until 1989; in Guatemala, CIA–organized coup deposes constitutional President Jacobo Arbenz and begins three decades of often brutal military rule; United Fruit company regains lands nationalized in land reform program begun during 1944 revolution Juan Perón ousted from power by the military; goes into exile; Honduras, Nicaragua, and Peru granted women’s suffrage Juscelino Kubitschek de Oliveira inaugurated president of Brazil; construction of Brasília begins François “Papa Doc” Duvalier elected president of Haiti; Colombia grants women’s suffrage Dictator Pérez Jimínez ousted as dictator in Venezuela, Acción Democrática’s Rómulio Betacourt elected president of Venezuela; beginning of the modern democratic era Batista flees Cuba; Fidel Castro and the 26th of July movement take power construction of Brasília completed Paraguay the Last Latin American country to grant suffrage to women; the United States organizes unsuccessful Bay of Pigs invasion by Cuban exiles. The Second Vatican Conference commits the Church to work for human rights, justice, and freedom Peronists again allowed to run for office in Argentina; Cuban Missile Crisis; Jamaica gains independence from Britain Rural unionization legalized in Brazil; peasant leagues grow Eduardo Frei elected president of Chile; military coup in Brazil; bureaucratic authoritarian military stays in power until 1985 U.S. Marines invaded the Dominican Republic 1966 1967 1968 1970 1971 1973 1974 1975 1976 1978 1979 1980 1981 Brazil’s government unveils “Operation Amazonia” a plan to develop the Amazon Basin Ernesto “Che” Guevara dies in Bolivia October 2 student massacre in Tlanelolca, Mexico City; meeting of Latin American bishops in Medellín, Colombia adopts a “preferen-tial option for the poor” under the influence of liberation theology; reformist military leaders take over in Peru under Juan Velasco Alvarado Salvador Allende elected president of Chile; he is the first freely elected Marxist president in Latin America; the Communist Party of Peru– Sendero Luminoso (PCP-SL) emerges after an ideological split in Peru’s Communist party; origins of the group can be traced to a study group formed in the early 1960s by Professor Abimael Guzmán Reynoso at the University of San Cristoból de Huamanga; Sendero Luminoso, the Shinning Path, later takes the form of a revolutionary movement. Haitian president “Papa Doc” Duvalier dies; his son, Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, takes control; U.S. Peace Corps, accused of sterilizing Indian women without their knowledge, expelled from Bolivia Juan Perón reelected president of Argentina, his wife, Isabel becomes vice president; Salvador Allende killed in a September 11 military coup in Chile; General Augusto Pinochet initiates a brutal military dictatorship Juan Perón dies; Isabel Perón becomes the first female president of a Latin American country UN Conference on Women held in Mexico City, kicked off the Decade for Women; Cuba passes law requiring men and women to share responsibilities for household work and child–rearing Argentine military ousts Isabel Perón; General Jorge Rafel Videla takes power, and the “Dirty War” begins; the Mothers of the Disappered begin to hold weekly vigils challenging the military government’s human rights abuses John Paul II becomes Pope; the Catholic Church becomes more conservative; conservative leaders begin to attempt to eliminate liberation theology Somoza regime collapses; the Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (FSLN), or Sandinista National Liberation Front takes power Archbishop Oscar Romero of San Salvador assassinated; four American church women murdered by Salvadoran military; Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) formed in ElnSalvador U.S. inspires contras to war against Nicaraguan government; 30,000 die before 1990 1982 1983 1985 1986 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 Falkland/Malvinas Islands War begins between Argentina and Brtitain; Brazil elects first freely elected governors since 1965; General Efrain Rios Montt become Latin America’s first evangelical dictator in Guatemala, and embarks on a brutal counterinsurgency that often targets entire Indian communities U.S. Marines land in Granada Brazil elects Tancredo Neves as first freely elected president; the night of his inauguration he has surgery and never recovers; Vice President José Sarney becomes president “Baby Doc” Duvalier flees Haiti Amidst well–documented charges of election fraud Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) candidate Carlos Salinas defeats Cuauhtémoc Cádenas and Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) to gain presidency of Mexico Carlos Menem elected president of Argentina; Patrico Aylwin elected president of Chile, the first elected president since Allende, Pinochet maintains his position as Commander–in–Chief of the Chilean Armed Forces and as Senator–for–life; in Brazil Fernando Collor de Mello elected president, defeating Workers’ Party (PT) leader Inacio “Lula” da Silva; U.S. troops invade Panama to oust Manuel Noreíga; six Jesuit priests are assassinated in El Salvador by U.S. trained troops after the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) overruns much of San Salvador; announcement of austerity package in Venezula causes riots; 267 die Alberto Fujimori elected president of Peru; stays in office until 2001; President Salinas of Mexico announces his intent to negotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the United States; Jean – Bertrand Aristide elected president of Haiti; a military coup prevents him from taking power; Violeta Barrios de Chamorro elected president of Nicaragua, defeating FSLN candidate Daniel Ortega Jorge Serrano of Guatemala becomes Latin America’s first elected evangelical president In Brazil, Collar is impeached and Vice President Itamar Franco becomes president; Fugimori closes congress in an auto – golpe, or self – coup; leader of the Sendero Luminoso, Abimael Guzmán, captured; World Summit on Environment and Development held in Rio de Janerio; guerrilla war ends in El Salvador; two military coups attempts occur in Venezuela Eduargo Frei (son of the president from 1964 – 1970) elected president of Chile; Carlos Andrés Pérez forced to step down in Venezuela Fernando Henrique Cardoso elected president of Brazil; NAFTA goes into effect on January 1; Zapatista National Liberation Army revolts in Chiapas; Ernesto Zedillo elected president of Mexico after first PRI candidate is assassinated 1995 1998 1999 2000 Menem reelected president of Argentina; Fujimori reelected president of Peru; United States occupies Haiti; Aristide assumes presidency; new quota in Argentina making sure that one in four congresspeople are women; Merscosur, or Southern Cone Common Market, is founded; nations included are: Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and Paraguay; they are joined later by Bolivia and Chile Pinochet loses post as Commander–in–Chief of Chilean Armed Forces; Cardoso reelected president of Brazil, once again defeating Lula; former coup leader Hugo Chávez elected president of Venezuela, ending domination by two traditional parties, Acción Democrática and the Social Christian Party (COPEI) Mireya Moscoso elected first woman president of Panama Socialist Ricardo Lagos elected president of Chile as the Concentación candidate; Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE) and military officers briefly take over congress in Ecuador; Fugimori reelected president of Peru after forcing constitutional changes allowing him to run for a third term, forced out of office in 2001; opposition candidate Vicente Fox elected president of Mexico, breaking seven decades of presidential domination by the PRI; in Venezuela, president Hugo Chávez reelected for six – year term under new constitution