Armando Cuitlahuac Amador Sandoval

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Armando Cuitlahuac Amador Sandoval (* 1897 Zacatecas (city) ; † 1970 ) was a Mexican ambassador .

Life

Armando Cuitlahuac Amador Sandoval was the son of Josefa Muro Sandoval Amador and Elias Amador. From 1922 to 1932 he wrote as a journalist for El Universal Ilustrado.

In 1931 he was consul in New Orleans . In 1932 he was consul in Del Rio (Texas) . On April 28, 1933, he became consul in Yokohama , Japan. Armando Cuitlahuac Amador Sandoval opened a consulate in Nanjing in 1936 , which he moved to Shanghai on December 12, 1937 . As the end of 1937, the beginning of the second Sino-Japanese war , the Kuomintang under Lin Sen the seat of government to Chongqing moved, remained Armando Cuitlahuac Amador Sandoval in Shanghai and was charge d'affaires at the Government of Liang Hongzhi , which met in Nanking on March 28, 1938 .

On May 1, 1940, he was transferred from Shanghai to Tegucigalpa as first class embassy secretary .

In 1944 he published Tres cuentos mexicanos .

From March to October 1950 he headed the foreign trade department of the Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores and set out in a memorandum why the Mexican government did not recognize the regime of Francisco Franco .

From May 21, 1954 to October 4, 1960 he represented the Mexican government at the Organization of American States . On June 20, 1955, César Augusto Bunge Guerrico Álvarez Calderón (born November 9, 1918 in San Sebastián; † April 15, 2002 in Buenos Aires) resigned as chairman of the Inter-American Economic and Social Council and Armando Cuitlahuac Amador Sandoval replaced him this function.

On April 16, 1959, he signed the founding statute of the Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo for Mexico.

predecessor Office successor
Francisco Javier Aguilar González Mexican Chargé d'affaires in Shanghai
April 27, 1938 to June 3, 1938
Primo Villa Michel
Alberto C. Franco Mexican Ambassador to Tegucigalpa
April 16, 1920 to July 19, 1921
Alfonso Herrera Salcedo
Gabriel Lucio Argüelles Representative of the Mexican government to the Organization of American States
May 21, 1954 to October 4, 1960
Vicente Sánchez Gavito

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Francisco E. Balderrama, Raymond Rodríguez, Decade of betrayal: Mexican repatriation in the 1930s
  2. Mexico. Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Boletín oficial de la Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores , Tomo 60, 1933
  3. Yolanda Trápaga, China y México : implicaciones de una nueva relación, Jornada Ediciones, 2007, p. 34.
  4. Mexico. Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Memoria de la Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores de ... a ... presentada a la H. Congreso de la Unión, 1939.
  5. Mauricio Fresco: La emigración republicana española: una victoria de México (PDF; 676 kB) biblioteca.org.ar. P. 9. Retrieved June 19, 2011.