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On 14 September 2010, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced
the appointment of Ms. Michelle Bachelet, former President
of Chile, as Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN Women. Ms.
Bachelet brings to this critical position a history of dynamic global
leadership, highly honed political skills and uncommon ability to create
consensus and focus among UN Agencies and many partners in both the public and
private sectors.
Michelle Bachelet was born in Santiago, Chile on 29 September 1951. She has
three children: Sebastián, Francisca, and Sofía.
She is trained as a doctor, with graduate studies in Military Sciences. She
speaks Spanish and English and has a command in German, French and
Portuguese.
Her mother, Ángela Jeria, is an archaeologist. Her father, Alberto Bachelet,
was a General in the Chilean Air Force.
In 1970, Michelle Bachelet accompanied a friend to the Posta Central, a major
public hospital in Santiago. Although she had previously been thinking about
studying Sociology or Economics, her time at the hospital led her to study
Medicine at the University of Chile, as a concrete way to relieve people’s pain
and improve healthcare in Chile.
A leader in student political affairs, during the Unidad Popular (Popular
Unity) government of Salvador Allende she participated in the Socialist Youth
movement.
Known for exceptional organizational talents developed during his time in the
Air Force, General Bachelet was asked by President Allende in 1972 to head the
government’s Price and Supply Committees Juntas de Abastecimiento y Precios, and
remained there until General Augusto Pinochet led a coup against Allende’s
government on 11 September 1973.
General Bachelet was arrested that same day and held captive in the Air War
Academy, accused of “treason against the homeland.” He was later moved from the
Air War Academy to a public prison. He died there on 12 March 1974, having
suffered a heart attack as a result of the strain on his body from the torture
to which he was submitted.
Despite the traumatic events that affected her family and her country,
Michelle Bachelet continued studying and participating in Chile’s Socialist
Party. On 10 January 1975, two agents from the DINA (Dirección Nacional de
Inteligencia, the Pinochet regime’s secret police force) came to the apartment
she shared with her mother, blindfolded both of them, and took them to the Villa
Grimaldi, the DINA’s main torture and detention centre.
Later, both mother and daughter were moved to the Cuatro Àlamos detention
centre, where they remained until the end of January.
Bachelet and Jeria traveled to Australia as exiles. From there, they
continued on to East Germany, where Michelle Bachelet studied German, in
Leipzig, and then enrolled at Humboldt University medical school in Berlin.
While living in Germany, she married a fellow Chilean exile, architect Jorge
Dávalos. Dávalos is the father of her two older children: Sebastián, who was
born in 1978 in Leipzig, and Francisca, who was born in 1984, once the family
had returned to Chile.
Michelle Bachelet returned to Chile in 1979, and continued her studies in
medicine at the University of Chile. She graduated as a surgeon in 1982.
Then she spent four years specializing in paediatrics and public health at
the Roberto del Río Hospital.
She also joined different political organizations working to restore
democracy to Chile, and was later hired to work in the medical section of PIDEE,
an NGO that offered different types of treatment to children traumatized by
dictatorship.
Once democracy was restored in 1990, there was immediately a great need for
professionals to help restore the country’s public health system, which had been
neglected by the dictatorship on a massive scale. She was hired as an
epidemiologist at the Metropolitan Health Service in western Santiago, and later
moved to CONASIDA, the National AIDS Commission. During this time, she consulted
for the Pan-American Health Organization, the World Health Organization and the
German Technical Cooperation Agency (GTZ). Her youngest daughter, Sofía
Henríquez, was born during this period as well.
In 1994, she joined the Health Ministry as a consultant on Primary Care and
Healthcare Services Management issues.
Her experiences both as a member of a military family and a member of the
civilian political sector led her to feel that prevailing political sentiment
did not sufficiently value defence policies and their institutional, political
and cultural implications. Her opinions on the matter motivated her to take a
course on military strategy in the National Academy of Strategic and Political
Studies (ANEPE), which she finished at the top of her class. This qualified her
for a President of the Republic scholarship to take a course on Continental
Defence at the Inter-American Defense College in Washington, DC in 1997, along
with 35 other civilians and members of the military from all over the Americas.
She returned and was immediately hired to work in the Ministry of Defence.
Michelle Bachelet was chosen by the Central Committee of the Socialist Party
to run for the city council of the Santiago-area district of Las Condes in 1996.
In 1998, she was chosen by the party’s Central Committee to join its Political
Committee, where she remained until 11 March 2000.
She worked as Ricardo Lagos’ campaign manager.
In 2000, Michelle Bachelet was named Minister of Health in President Ricardo
Lagos’ administration. She found herself at the head of an organization with
more than 70,000 workers and a nationwide network of public health services; it
also supervises, either directly or indirectly, autonomous municipal health
services and the private healthcare system.
President Lagos gave her two main tasks to complete as Minister. The first
was to improve primary care, increasing the quality and coverage of care at the
country’s public health clinics and eliminating long wait times for treatment at
those clinics. The second was to begin preparation for a major healthcare reform
program.
On 7 January 2002, President Lagos reshuffled his Cabinet and moved Michelle
Bachelet to head of the Defence Ministry. She was the first woman both in Chile
and in Latin America to hold such a position.
During her tenure as Defence Minister, Chile’s rules about obligatory
military service were modified in key ways, the role of the Ministry and the
government in military affairs was strengthened, and equal-opportunity policies
were instituted for women in the military, the Carabineros Police and the
Investigations Police.
On 1 October 2004, Michelle Bachelet resigned from the Defence Ministry. She
was then free to fully focus on her presidential campaign, which was gathering
momentum at the time thanks to overwhelming popular support for her bid. She
started out by accompanying mayor and city council candidates from the governing
Concertación coalition during their campaigns throughout the country.
After the municipal elections, she was proclaimed candidate for the
Presidency by the PPD (Party for Democracy) and Socialist Parties.
In a run-off presidential election held on 15 February 2006, Michelle
Bachelet won 53.49 percent of the vote and thus became the first woman to be
elected President in the history of the Republic of Chile. She held this office
for four years, serving her full term, which ended on 11 March 2010 with the
greatest approval from people in the history of Chile.
In April 2010, former President Michelle Bachelet founded and headed Dialoga
Foundation, as a way to contribute to and support a renovation of ideas, action,
and leadership in Chile.
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