Arnoldo Castillo

Arnoldo Castillo
Governor of Catamarca
In office
December 10, 1991  December 10, 1999
Lieutenant Simón Hernández
Preceded by Luis Prol
Succeeded by Oscar Castillo
Governor of Catamarca
In office
March 3, 1981  December 10, 1983
Preceded by Oscar Barcena
Succeeded by Ramón Saadi
Mayor of San Fernando del Valle de Catamarca
In office
May 19, 1976  April 3, 1981
Preceded by Raúl Blas
Succeeded by Carlos Varela
Personal details
Born April 29, 1922
Quilmes, Buenos Aires Province
Died September 29, 2005(2005-09-29) (aged 83)
Catamarca
Political party Radical Civic Union
Profession Engineer

Arnoldo Castillo (April 29, 1922 — September 29, 2005) was an Argentine politician.

Life and times

Arnoldo Aníbal Castillo was born to Carmen Berrondo and Gualberto Castillo in Quilmes, a suburb of Buenos Aires, in 1922. His parents relocated to Catamarca, in the Argentine Northwest, early in his childhood. Castillo enrolled at the National University of Córdoba, where he studied mechanical engineering, and at the National University of San Juan, to study mining engineering. Unable to graduate, he was subsequently hired as a public administration clerk at Vialidad Nacional, the National Highway Bureau, and became a specialized advisor in the construction of mountain roads.

His experience took him to Bolivia in 1949, and helped plan that country's stretch of the Pan-American Highway. Returning to Catamarca, he worked as a consultant from 1950 to 1963, when he was elected to the Provincial Legislature on the centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR-P) ticket. Castillo was elected Mayor of Catamarca in 1966, in the first direct election for that post in the province's history; a coup d'état that June led to his removal by military authorities, however.

The same regime, represented in Catamarca by de facto Governor Horacio Pernasetti, appointed Castillo interim Mayor of Catamarca in 1971. A subsequent dictatorship again called on Castillo shortly after the March 1976 coup; Castillo resigned his membership in the UCR, and he served in the post until 1981.[1] His membership in the UCR was reinstated after the return of democracy with elections in 1983.

The new governor, Ramón Saadi of the (Peronist) Justicialist Party, faced a crisis of his own when the rape and murder of a local teen, María Soledad Morales, in September 1990, was placed at the hands of two youths whose fathers were close to Governor Saadi.[2] Saadi, an ally of President Carlos Menem, was replaced with a Federal Receivership by order of the President within days of the tragedy; ultimately, however, Catamarca voters turned against the ruling Justicialists, and Castillo was elected governor in elections in 1991.

Castillo's tenure was marked by an emphasis on infrastructure investments, notably road building and rural electrification. Two landmark projects include the Cuesta de El Portezuelo road and the San Francisco Pass, which improved links between both sides of the rugged Ancasti range, and facilitated commerce with neighboring Chile, respectively. The governor responded to the province's judicial bottlenecks by decreeing that, counter to the provincial constitution, candidates from anywhere in Argentina could be eligible for the bench in Catamarca.[3] Castillo was challenged in his 1995 campaign for reelection by Ramón Saadi, who was defeated by 8%; the strength of the UCR in Catamarca led Castillo to forego joining the Alliance formed at the national level with the center-left Frepaso in 1997.[4]

His tenure, in turn, was criticized for refusing to advertise in El Ancasti, Catamarca's most important news daily, as well as for its numerous lawsuits against the publication.[5] Around 200 fraudulent pensions awarded during the Castillo tenure sent three of his officials to prison shortly after his retirement.[6]

He was succeeded as governor by his son, Oscar, in 1999, and retired from public office; the UCR retained the governor's post in subsequent elections. Suffering from Type II diabetes, his health deteriorated in his later years. Arnoldo Castillo died in Catamarca in 2005, at age 83. A monument in his honor was unveiled in Catamarca in 2010.[7]

References

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