Freitas do Amaral, a ‘father’ of Portuguese democracy, dies
LISBON, Portugal — Diogo Freitas do Amaral, a conservative Portuguese politician who played a leading role in cementing the country’s democracy after its 1974 Carnation Revolution and later became president of the U.N. General Assembly, has died at 78.
The Portuguese government announced his death Thursday without providing further details.
Earlier this year, President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa described Freitas do Amaral as “one of the fathers of Portuguese democracy.”
Freitas do Amaral was a co-founder and the first leader of the Christian Democratic Party, which was formed barely three months after the Portuguese army coup on April 25, 1974. The coup leaders ousted a four-decade dictatorship and promised to introduce parliamentary democracy, but their ambitions were slowed by political turmoil.