Jaime Aparicio Otero | |
---|---|
Born | Jaime Aparicio Otero August 30, 1955 La Paz, Bolivia |
Occupation | Lawyer, diplomat and political consultant |
Education | Higher University of San Andrés, La Paz, Bolivia La Sorbonne, Paris, France Institut d'Études Politiques, Paris, France. |
Notable awards |
|
Relatives | Maria Otero, Jaime Otero Calderon |
Jaime Aparicio Otero (born August 30, 1955 in La Paz, Bolivia) is the Bolivian Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States and was Bolivian Agent to the International Court of Justice,[2] in the Hague, in the process against Chile related to the Silala waters.[3][4] Ambassador Aparicio is a career diplomat, lawyer, journalist and a Washington-based legal and political advisor.[5][6] He was also a political analyst working in international public and corporate affairs in Latin America, the Caribbean, North America, and Europe. He has a Law Degree from the Higher University of San Andrés of La Paz, the Bolivian Diplomatic Academy and the Institute d’Etudes Politiques commonly referred as Sciences Po de Paris.[7]
With over two decades of personal experience dealing with the United States and with four different US Presidents JAO championed Access to Information as a Fundamental Human Right in the continent.[1]
Aparicio has been working in issues related to international law, democracy, human rights, and rule of law in Latin America for more than 30 years.[8] Aparicio's firm, Aparicio, Arp & Associates LLC, has submitted petitions to the Inter-American Human Rights Commission representing, among others, the Cuban blogger Yoani Sánchez.[9][10] and the "Ladies in White" Group (Damas de Blanco).[11]
He was the Ambassador of Bolivia to the United States (2002-2006)[12] and was later President of the Inter-American Juridical Committee of the OAS. Previously, he worked at the Organization of American States as Executive Secretary of the Summits of the Americas. Before that, he was Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Acting Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs of Bolivia.[13][14] Aparicio led several missions to the General Assembly of the United Nations, UNESCO and the Organization of American States.
He has also served abroad in Venezuela and France as Bolivia's Permanent Representative to UNESCO in Paris.[5]
In 2019, Aparicio sued President of Nicaragua Daniel Ortega at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) after Ortega jumped a constitutional ban on presidential re-election with help from a Supreme Court filled with his supporters setting a major precedent for similar unconstitutional re-elections across the continent and more especially of his Bolivian counterpart Evo Morales.[15][16] Aparicio has become one of the most vocal opponents to dictatorships across Latin America, especially in Cuba,[17] Bolivia,[18] Venezuela and Nicaragua.
{{cite news}}
: |author=
has generic name (help)