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・ Ana Sasso
・ Ana Savić
・ Ana Semren
・ Ana Seneviratne
・ Ana Serradilla
・ Ana Siljak
・ Ana Silvera
・ Ana Simonović
・ Ana Sofrenović
・ Ana Sofía Gómez
・ Ana Sofía Sánchez
・ Ana Sol Gutierrez
・ Ana María Rodríguez (alpine skier)
・ Ana María Rodríguez (writer)
・ Ana María Rojas Ruiz
Ana María Romero de Campero
・ Ana María Schultz
・ Ana María Shua
・ Ana María Simo
・ Ana María Stekelman
・ Ana María Torres
・ Ana María Tostado
・ Ana María Vignoli
・ Ana María Vázquez Hoys
・ Ana María Weir
・ Ana María Yabar Sterling
・ Ana Matawhaura Hato
・ Ana Matnadze
・ Ana Mato
・ Ana Matronic


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Ana María Romero de Campero : ウィキペディア英語版
Ana María Romero de Campero

Ana María Romero de Campero (29 June 1941 – 26 October 2010) was a Bolivian journalist, writer, activist and influential public figure in her country. She was the first Human Rights Ombudswoman (Defensor del Pueblo) (1998–2003) of Bolivia and President of the Senate of Bolivia at the time of her death. Ana María Romero dedicated her life to promoting democracy and human rights with particular regard for those most disadvantaged in Bolivian society.
== Family and early years ==

Ana Maria Romero de Campero was born in La Paz, Bolivia into a middle class household of liberal ideas. She was christened Ana Maria de las Nieves (Ana Maria of the Snows) due to the unusual snowstorm that took place on the day of her birth. However, throughout her life and public activity she used different variants of her name, which she explained as follows: Ana Maria Romero, was her maiden name; Ana Maria Romero de Campero her married name, and the one registered on her identity card; Ana Maria Campero, her journalistic name; and Anamar, her nom de guerre.〔Baudoin, Magela. “Mujeres de Costado”. Plural Editores, 2010.〕
She lived part of her childhood with her siblings under the care of her paternal grandmother, a woman whose strong character, tenacity and severe discipline definitely influenced her education. At the same time, her childhood was deeply impacted by the vicissitudes of Bolivian politics. Her father, Gonzalo Romero, was a leading figure of the Bolivian Socialist Falange (FSB) party, a political movement that joined the opposition after the April 1952 Revolution, and was subject to political persecution by the ruling regime.
Her paternal family came from the town of Cinti, in the rural area of southern Bolivia, where she often traveled during her childhood and which she liked to evoke due to the beauty of its landscape. Both her paternal grandfather and her great-grandfather had also been involved in diplomacy, journalism and politics.
Ana Maria Romero was educated at the Sacred Heart School in the city of La Paz and at the Irish Catholic School in Cochabamba, where she lived for a year when her father went into exile. Possessing strong convictions and great charisma, she showed leadership skills from her college days when she was elected president of the Catholic University’s Journalism Student Center, between 1968 and 1970.
In 1961, Ana Maria Romero married Fernando A. Campero Prudencio, a marriage that lasted for 49 years until her death. She frequently portrayed her husband as a self-reliant person, who was ahead of his time and who supported her to grow professionally and intellectually. Her marriage and subsequent motherhood to three children did not prevent her from completing her university studies, developing a renowned career in journalism and excelling in public life, even at a time when these activities were primarily male-dominated.

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