Juan Luis Ossa Bulnes (born 10 October 1942) is a Chilean lawyer, academic, mining entrepreneur, and politician.
Ossa was born on 11 October 1942 in Santiago to Adolfo Ossa Joglar and Ana Bulnes Sanfuentes. Ossa is the maternal nephew of the former minister and the former parliamentarians Francisco Bulnes Sanfuentes and Jaime Bulnes Sanfuentes.
Ossa was educated the St. Ignatius College and Libertador Bernardo O'Higgins Military Academy, where he obtained the rank of reserve second lieutenant. Ossa later studied law at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, and specialized in mining law. In 1965, Ossa graduated with a law degree.
At the end of the 1960s, he entered politics by joining the National Party (PN). In the 1969 parliamentary elections he ran as a candidate for deputy for the 25th Departmental District (Ancud, Castro, Quinchao, and Palena), but was not elected. In March 1971 he was one of the founders of the newspaper Tribuna, which opposed the government of Salvador Allende, and in March 1972 he was appointed president of the PN Youth, as well as head of its political training. At the same time, he served on the board of the National Mining Society (SONAMI). In the 1973 elections, he was elected deputy for the First Metropolitan District (1973âÂÂ1977). He joined the National Defense Committee and was among the deputies who promoted the Agreement of 22 August 1973, denouncing alleged abuses of the rule of law by the Popular Unity government of Salvador Allende.
He was unable to finish his legislative term after the dissolution of the National Congress of Chile on 21 September 1973.
Journalist Manuel Salazar stated in his book Contreras, Historia de un Intocable that Juan Luis Ossa Bulnes was head of the Rolando Matus Command, a shock group that arose during the Popular Unity government under the umbrella of the National Party.
During the military dictatorship led by Augusto Pinochet, he participated in the drafting of the Organic Law on Mining Concessions and the Mining Code. He also published several academic works, including the two-volume treatise Derecho de MinerÃÂa, with editions in 1989, 1992, 1999, and 2007, which includes comparative legislation from Latin America and was described by El Mercurio as the most comprehensive work on the subject in Chile. As a professional, he received the Public Law Seminar Award granted by the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile.
In 1983, he joined the first leadership of the National Union Movement (MUN), a precursor of National Renewal.
Upon his appointment at Codelco, in May 2010 he was accused by Socialist senator Camilo Escalona of being "a prominent representative of the private mining sectorâÂÂs corporate lobby." Ossa is the vice-president of the Chilean Bar Association and a member of National Renewal.
Ossa is married to historian LucÃÂa Santa Cruz Sutil, a historian and academic. Ossa and Santa Cruz have three children, including the lawyer and politician Juan José Ossa.