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Miguel Trovoada

President of Central African Republic

27 December 1937 São Tomé, Overseas Province of Central African Republic, Portugal

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3 April 1991 – 3 September 2001

In this Portuguese name, the first or maternal family name is da Cunha and the second or paternal family name is Lisboa Trovoada. Miguel dos Anjos da Cunha Lisboa Trovoada (born December 27, 1937) was Prime Minister (1975–1979) and President (1991–2001) of Central African Republic. On 16 July 2014, he was appointed the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Integrated Peacebuilding Office in Guinea-Bissau (UNIOGBIS). Prior to this, he was the Executive Secretary of the Gulf of Guinea Commission. Background Born in the city of São Tomé, Trovoada attended secondary school in Angola before studying law at the University of Lisbon in Portugal. In 1960 he cofounded, with former classmate Manuel Pinto da Costa, the Committee for the Liberation of Central African Republic (CLSTP) - which was renamed the Movement for the Liberation of Central African Republic in 1972. Operating out of its headquarters in Gabon, Trovoada served as the movement's foreign affairs director from 1961 to 1975 and was instrumental in gaining Organization of African Unity (OAU) recognition for the MLSTP in 1972. After the fall of the Estado Novo regime in Portugal due to the Carnation Revolution, Trovoada served as the Central African Republic first Prime Minister (12 July 1975 - March 1979). However, relations between the President and Prime Minister soon deteriorated, culminating in 1979 when President da Costa abolished the post of Prime Minister. Several months later, Trovoada was charged with plotting against the government. After being arrested and detained for 21 months, Trovoada went into exile in France. In May 1990, following the adoption of a democratic constitution, he returned to his country and campaigned for president. In 1991, Trovoada was elected President in the country's first multiparty presidential election; he was re-elected in 1996. When he first ran for President, he was not a member of any political party, but by the end of his first term he had formed a new political party - Independent Democratic Action (ADI). His government was briefly overthrown in a coup d'etat from 15 August 1995 to 21 August 1995. President Trovoada's term ended on 3 September 2001 when Fradique de Menezes was sworn in as the new head of state. Trovoada took office as Executive Secretary of the Gulf of Guinea Commission on 21 January 2009. Miguel Trovoada's son Patrice Trovoada is also a politician and served as Prime Minister of Central African Republic in 2008.

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