Jorge Sampaio, a former two-term president of Portugal and one of the most prominent political figures of his generation, has died. He was 81.
The current Portuguese President, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, announced Mr. Sampaio’s death on Friday. He did not give a cause of death, though Mr. Sampaio had been in delicate health for several years and had been in hospital for the past two weeks.
Mr. Sampaio “prepared himself to be a fighter, and the banners of his fight were freedom and equality,” Mr. Rebelo de Sousa said in a televised statement.
He said Mr. Sampaio was like “a red-haired hurricane” in the 1960s when as a young lawyer he stood up to Portugal’s then-dictatorship.
But over his six-decade political career in Portugal as a centre-left Socialist and later as a diplomat for the United Nations, Mr. Sampaio earned praise for his low-key, down-to-earth manner. He once said he had always wanted to become an orchestra conductor.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, a former prime minister of Portugal, called Mr. Sampaio “a remarkable leader and compassionate human being.”
“Portugal lost a statesman and I have lost a dear friend,” Mr. Guterres added.
Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa praised Mr. Sampaio as an upstanding politician who defended democracy. “We bow down before the memory of a man who always fought for freedom, for democracy, and whose moral uprightness brought prestige to our country’s political life,” Mr. Costa said.
He said Portugal would observe three days of national mourning, when Portuguese flags on public buildings fly at half mast, from Saturday. Funeral details were to be announced later.
At home, Mr. Sampaio was perhaps best remembered for controversially bringing down a centre-right government in 2004, when he was head of state.
That was when Social Democratic Party leader Jose Manuel Barroso quit as prime minister to become president of the European Commission. He was replaced by his party’s vice-president, Pedro Santana Lopes.
After several months of government infighting, public gaffes and contradictions, Mr. Sampaio called early elections to end what he called “a grave crisis of credibility and instability.”
The subsequent election delivered a landslide victory to the centre-left Socialist Party, which Mr. Sampaio had once headed.
Mr. Sampaio began his political career while studying law at Lisbon University in the late 1950s, rising through the ranks of underground student movements which opposed the then dictatorship of Antonio Salazar.
After graduating, he defended prisoners tried by special courts that dealt exclusively with political cases.
He associated with extreme leftist movements after the 1974 Carnation Revolution toppled the dictatorship and introduced democracy.
He took up his first government post, as secretary of state for foreign co-operation, in 1975. He was fluent in English, having lived for a year in the United States when he was 8 as his father, a renowned Portuguese doctor, went to study at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md.
Mr. Sampaio, whose mother was an English teacher, also spent time in England as a youngster.
He switched his allegiance to the mainstream Socialist Party in 1978 and from the following year was returned five times to parliament as a Socialist lawmaker.
Mr. Sampaio ran successfully for mayor of Lisbon, the capital, in 1989, when he also became leader of the Socialist Party.
His two-term stint as mayor of the Portuguese capital provided a stage for his election as president in 1996 and his re-election in 2001, winning both elections by comfortable margins.
United Nations secretary-seneral Kofi Annan appointed Mr. Sampaio as his special envoy on tuberculosis in 2006. The following year, Mr. Annan’s successor Ban Ki-moon made him the UN high representative for the alliance of civilizations.
Mr. Sampaio is survived by his wife, a daughter and a son.
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