'Father' of EU's Erasmus study abroad programme Manuel Marin dies

A group of students on their graduation day. 'Father' of the EU's popular Erasmus student exchange scheme Manuel Marin has died at the age of 68. FILE PHOTO | WANG ZHAO | AFP

MADRID

Spanish politician Manuel Marin, a long-time member of the European Commission seen as the 'father' of the EU's popular Erasmus student exchange scheme, has died at the age of 68.

Marin, who since 2008 was the chairman of Fundacion Iberdrola Spain, the charitable arm of the country's largest power company, passed away in Madrid after "after a long illness", Iberdrola said in a statement. Spanish media said he had cancer.

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As Spain's secretary of state for relations with European communities in the 1980s, he led successful negotiations to enter the European Community (EC), the precursor to the European Union.

He went on to occupy a number of senior posts in the European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, between 1986 — the year Spain joined the bloc — and 1999, including vice president and commissioner in charge of education.

Under his watch as education commissioner, the bloc in 1987 set up and implemented its Erasmus student exchange scheme which helps university students follow some of their studies in other EU countries.

Over nine million people have taken part in the programme, named after the Dutch philosopher Desiderius Erasmus (1466 - 1536), who travelled around Europe during the Renaissance to further humanist thinking.

"Very sad about the death of my friend Manuel Marin, former Spanish commissioner and father of the Erasmus programme," European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker wrote in a Twitter message.

Spanish Foreign Minister Alfonso Dastis hailed Marin as a "great Europeanist" while Spain's parliament speaker Ana Pastor called him a "gentleman of politics".

Marin, who served as speaker of the Spanish parliament himself between 2004 and 2008, was married and had two daughters.