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The Dictator Who Would Not Die

Herald Team

Earlier this month, the British writer and documentary film-maker, Matthew Teller, wrote a viral thread on Twitter that started like this: “Exactly 54 years ago, 3 Aug 1968, Portugal’s authoritarian prime minister António de Oliveira Salazar, 79, slipped over in the bath & hit his head. He seemed to be ok, but then complained of feeling ill. In hospital, he lapsed into a coma. It looked like he was about to die. Portugal’s president appointed a new prime minister to replace Salazar, who had been in office since 1932.”

Now came the twist, “Salazar woke up. Rather than break the news to the dictator that he had been dismissed, his aides set up an elaborate scheme to fool him that he was still in charge. Ex-ministers held “policy” meetings with Salazar. Every night, the editor of Salazar’s favourite newspaper printed a fake edition that removed mention of the new government and substituted bogus stories as if Salazar was still PM. The dictator read the fictional newspaper unawares. The charade carried on for two years. The dictator had no idea he was being duped. Eventually, on 27 July 1970, Salazar died, less than four years later the authoritarian state he had built collapsed.”

It’s an incredible story, which hits particularly hard in Goa, where it was apparent that Salazar was extraordinarily delusional long before he slipped and hit his head. As we see in the British historian Tom Gallagher’s adept recent biography Salazar: The Dictator Who Refused to Die (2020, Hurst & Company), it was a way of life that first made him, and then proved his unmaking: “He would use the indomitability which had marked his family’s story to define Portugal’s relationship with the rest of the world, and especially with the great powers.”

Gallagher writes that Salazar was frugal and punctilious, and never travelled outside Iberia except once, to whistle-stop through France to Belgium and back. He was happiest in the village of Santa Comba Dão where “only major crises prevented him from being back in the autumn for the gathering-in of grapes or the bottling of the wine on his small estate.” But behind this ostentatious austerity was rampant cronyism. Mario Soares pointed out that he “left that clique of vultures uncontrolled [and able] to go on creating an inextricable web of political and economic connections.”

Timing is the crux of legacy. Salazar burst into the historical frame when his country needed his bent, convictions and skills. In just one year, he balanced the budget and stabilized the escudo. Then - an unquestionably great feat – he navigated Portugal’s neutrality through World War II. But immediately afterwards came the winds of change, which he failed to recognize, and refused to believe. The same characteristics which were once his strengths proved his country’s undoing.

Gallagher says Salazar was “simply too old to shed his paternalistic and at times racist approach to empire.” Certainly, even by the standards of the time, the dictator was shockingly ignorant about the world, including Portugal’s own African and Asian territories. In one meeting with Jorge Jardim, his former Secretary of State, he disrupted proceedings by referring to “little black folk.” The elegant Maria de Lourdes Figueiredo de Albuqerque, who sat in the Portuguese parliament, was surprised to discover he believed most of her Goan compatriots had European blood.

Even more than the post-accident farce, it is Salazar’s abysmal miscalculations in Goa that most accurately reveal his mania. While always losing, he absurdly claimed victory. Instead of negotiating with dignity, he preferred to burn the house down. It is not as though there hadn’t been enough warning. By 1950, there was huge support for decolonization building both within and outside the territory. This could easily have been resolved the Pondicherry way, where a general election resulted in the peaceful transfer of territories. But that was anathema for the Portuguese dictator, who argued ridiculously that “Goa is the expression of Portugal in India and the Goans have no wish to be freed from Portuguese sovereignty.”

In fact, Salazar had already received the secret report of Orlando Ribeiro, who testified, “I have visited all the Portuguese territories in Africa, starting from Mozambique, and have studied Guinea and the islands of Cape Verde; I have spent four months in Brazil and observed its deep recesses. I had thus acquired a good preparation to initiate my research [and] Goa appeared to me as the least Portuguese of all the Portuguese territories I had seen so far, even less than Guinea, which was pacified in 1912!”

Ribeiro concluded, “The predominant relationship is of distance and suspicion, when it is not an outright or camouflaged antipathy. I had witnessed a near total ignorance of our language, the persistence of a society, not only strange and indifferent, but even hostile to our presence, our limited influence, encrusted as a schist in the body of renascent Hinduism, all this has left me very disillusioned about Goa.”

By this time, almost a decade after 1947, New Delhi’s initial indulgence was steadily deteriorating. The defence establishment (which had many Goan officers) was keen to act, and Nehru - who had referred to Goa as “the pimple of the face of Mother India” - was impatient. Salazar was already become a laughing stock, but still the stubborn old man refused to see what everyone else had realized. His foolish blunders cost the Goans greatly.

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