Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fidel V. Ramos began his presidency at noon on June 30, 1992, following his inauguration as the 12th president of the Philippines, succeeding Corazon Aquino.He is the first Protestant president of the country, and the first Christian Democrat to be elected, being the founder of Lakas-CMD (Christian-Muslim Democrats Party).
On March 18, 2022, on Ramos' 94th birthday, the Fidel V. Ramos Presidential Library was launched online. [48] It became the first and so far, the only online presidential library in the Philippines. [63] It was later revealed that Ramos was already ill at this time and was unable to take on visitors. [64]
As early as 5 December 1994, President Fidel V. Ramos signed Administrative Order No. 160 that created a national commission in preparation for the APEC meetings. [2] The National Organizing Commission (APEC-NOC) was chaired by the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, with the Secretary of Trade and Industry and the Executive Secretary as co-chairs. [1]
The cigar-chomping Ramos served as president from 1992 to 1998, after playing a key role in the 1986 ouster of dictator Ferdinand Marcos. Fidel Valdez Ramos, former Philippine leader who helped ...
Though Cojuangco lost to former National Defense Secretary Fidel V. Ramos for the presidency, Estrada won the vice-presidency garnering more votes than his closest opponent Marcelo Fernan, Ramon Mitra Jr.'s running mate. As vice president, Estrada was the chair of President Ramos' Presidential Anti-Crime Commission (PACC).
He was appointed Secretary of Foreign Affairs in 1992 by President Fidel V. Ramos. [3] As head of the Department of Foreign Affairs, he oversaw the case of Flor Contemplacion, a Filipino migrant worker in Singapore, who was sentenced to death for murder which human rights groups argued were coerced to admit to committing crime. Contemplacion's ...
Fidel V. Ramos: Previously served as Vice President of the Philippines from 1961 to 1965. [4] 13 Pablo Suarez: 1992: 1993 George H.W. Bush Bill Clinton: Fidel V. Ramos [4] 14 Raul Rabe: 1993: 1999 Bill Clinton [4] 15 Ernesto M. Maceda: 1999: 2001 Joseph Estrada [4] 16 Albert del Rosario: 2001: 2006 George W. Bush Barack Obama: Gloria Macapagal ...
The administration of Fidel Ramos from July 1992 to June 1998 defined four core areas of Philippine foreign policy: the enhancement of national security, promotion of economic diplomacy, protecting Overseas Filipino Workers and Filipino nationals abroad, the projection of a good image of the country abroad.