Beshootsu Pyvupi

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Beshootsu Pyvupi
Pyvupi giving a speech at the World Assembly
1st Prime Minister
In office
August 12, 1968 – June 11, 1991
Succeeded byPeket Ahmadi
1st Leader of the Shooda-Tsiba Party
In office
August 12, 1968 – June 11, 1991
Succeeded byPeket Ahmadi
Personal details
Born(1938-10-20)October 20, 1938
Bucha-Duchavo’a, Chavotsy
DiedJune 11, 1991(1991-06-11) (aged 52)
Chavotsy, Chavotsy
Cause of deathComplications of Gunshot Wound
Resting placeJishutsy, Duchavo
Political partyShooda-Tsiba
Spouse(s)Dukoo Chootsoo (m. 1973; d. 1976)
Alexander ga To’etsy (m. 1977; d. 1983)
Domestic partnerBena'ivoo Piba'i (1985-1991)
ChildrenCharlotte To'etsy-Pyvupi
MotherBevoo Pyvupi
RelativesTsupe Pyvupi

Beshootsu Pyvupi was the first Prime Minister of Tsiba and the founder of the Shooda-Tsiba party. She was the daughter of Bevoo Pyvupi, a Tsiba Independence Leader and the sister of Tsupe Pyvupi, the current leader of the Alliance for the People of Tsiba. She became involved in the counter-Islamist movement in her teens through her mother. She led the Shooda-Tsiba faction of the country during the Tsiba Civil War. After the overthrow of Muhammed Jutsytoo she took control of the country and founded the Shooda-Tsiba party. She served as Prime Minister of Tsiba from 1968 to her death in 1991, when she was assassinated during a visit to Chavotsy.

Early Life and Work

Pyvupi was born in 1938 in Bucha-Duchavo'a (then know as Buckadutch) during the British colonial era. Her mother, Bevoo Pyvupi, was an important Tsiba Independence Leader. Pyvupi never publically stated who her father was. Her younger brother, Tsupe, was born in 1942

When Pyvupi was five, the Islamic Republic of Tsiba was founded. Her mother was vocal in her socialist beliefs and in her criticism of Jutsytoo's government, which increasingly put the family at risk as the government began cracking down on dissenters. In 1951, Bevoo Pyvupi's newspaper, She Shoo Ibo’ugu, was banned, and a warrant was put out for her arrest. Pyvupi and her brother were pulled out of school, and the family went into hiding.

Pyvupi became interested in her mother's work as a young teenager. She began writing for She Shoo Ibo'ugu, which continued to be printed and distributed underground, when she was fifteen. As she got older, Pyvupi began to believe that violence was necessary to meet her and her mother's goals, increasingly distancing the two.

In 1956, Pyvupi began organizing student socialist groups around the country, where she met Peket Ahmadi for the first time. The two would continue to work together until Pyvupi's death.

In 1959, Pyvupi's younger brother, Tsupe, joined the Islamic Republic's military.

Tsiba Civil War

In 1964, Jutsytoo's forces began a massive campaign to arrest leaders of the growing socialist movement. Pyvupi's mother was arrested in 1965 for her continued publication of She Shoot Ibo'ugu. She was tried for sedition the next year, found guilty, and executed by firing squad on May 25, 1966.

Angered by her mother's death, Pyvupi began organizing a military force to fight against Jutsytoo's government. Jutsytoo's protege, Kamran Voohhatsu, organized a coup against Jutsytoo's government in 1967, splitting the Islamist government into two factions. Seeing the opportunity, Pyvupi's forces joined the war. By July of 1968, Pyvupi's troops had captured both Jutsytoo and Voohhatsu. They were executed together by firing squad on August 12, 1968, and Pyvupi declared herself the new Prime Minister of Tsiba, as well as leader of the newly formed socialist party, the Shooda-Tsiba.

Fighting continued in small pockets around the country until 1971, but Pyvupi and Ahmadi, who she had appointed as her Ja-Prime Minister, held the country's first elections for the Parliament (the Duchavoputsy) in 1970. Only Shooda-Tsiba candidates were allowed on ballots.

Political Career

As Prime Minister, Pyvupi worked to further develop the social welfare and healthcare systems developed during the Islamic Republic era. She also implemented extensive reforms to education, requiring all students to attend school until the age of sixteen, requiring schools to only teach secular curriculums, and requiring classes to be taught in both Farsi and Tsidi. As Prime Minister, Pyvupi also liberalized divorce laws and decriminalized homosexuality, among other social reforms.

In 1985, a group of Jutsytoo loyalists in Shuputsy rose against Pyvupi's government in the First Shuputsy Uprising. Pyvupi quickly responded, arresting over two hundred and publicly executing eleven leaders. Her brother, Tsupe Pyvupi, was one of the loyalists arrested, but Pyvupi pardoned him, drawing criticism from within the party.

Death

On June 11, 1991, Pyvupi was