Alfonso García Robles

@Mexican Men, Family and Personal Life

Alfonso García Robles was a Mexican diplomat who was the driving force behind the Treaty of Tlatelolco

Mar 20, 1911

MexicanMiscellaneousDiplomatsPisces Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: March 20, 1911
  • Died on: September 2, 1991
  • Nationality: Mexican
  • Famous: Mexican Men, Miscellaneous, Diplomats
  • Known as: Alfonso Garcia Robles
  • Universities:
    • National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • Birth Place: Zamora

Alfonso García Robles born at

Zamora

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Birth Place

While at New York, he met and fell in love with a Peruvian lady Juana María Szyszlo, an official of the UN. The couple got married in 1950 and had two children.

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Personal Life

In 1990 the Fulbright-García Robles scholarship honoring García Robles and U.S. Senator J. William Fulbright was established to help both Mexican and U.S. citizens.

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Personal Life

He died on 2 September 1991as a result of kidney failure. He was 80 years old.

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Personal Life

Alfonso García Robles was born on 20 March 1911, in Zamora, Michoacán, Mexico, into a family of merchants. He received his secondary education in Guadalajara.

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Childhood & Early Life

His initial career aspiration was to become a priest. However, with time his stance changed and he attended college in the city of Mexico, obtaining a bachelor of law degree from the National University.

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Childhood & Early Life

He developed a deep interest in international law and went to study in Netherlands. He received a diploma from the Academy of international law in the Hague, in 1938.

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Childhood & Early Life

After the completion of his studies he was assigned to the Mexican Embassy in Sweden for two years. In 1941, he was appointed to the Mexican Foreign Ministry as Deputy Director of political affairs of the Foreign Service.

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Career

In 1945, he was a part of the Mexican delegation to the San Francisco Conference. He participated in a series of international meetings leading to the formation of the United Nations. The next year he joined the United Nations Secretariat.

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Career

Garcia Robles returned to Mexico in 1957 and was reinstated to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as director in Chief of affairs of Europe, Asia, Africa and international agencies. He served as ambassador to Brazil from 1962 to 1964, and was state secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 1964 to 1970.

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Career

During this time he worked on addressing multilateral issues such as the work on disarmament in the United Nations. He was made the head of the delegation in the Committee on disarmament, marking a very vital point in his career.

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Career

Committed to the cause of disarmament, he worked tirelessly to bring about the signing of the Treaty for the prohibition of nuclear weapons in Latin America in 1967, known as the Treaty of Tlatelolco. García Robles has in fact been called the father of the Tlatelolco Agreement. In 1968, he helped draft the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.

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Career

He was the driving force behind the Treaty of Tlatelolco, setting up a nuclear-free zone in Latin America and the Caribbean. It was an agreement among 22 Latin-American countries that banned nuclear weapons in that part of the world. He was much respected for his tireless efforts toward global nuclear disarmament.

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Major Works