Manuel Rico Avello y GarcÃÂa de Lañón (20 December 1886 - 23 August 1936) was a Spanish politician, lawyer, and journalist who served as Minister of the Interior, Spanish High Commissioner in Morocco, and Minister of Finance during the Second Spanish Republic. Imprisoned by the Republican authorities at the start of the Spanish Civil War, he was later killedâÂÂalong with a number of other political prisonersâÂÂby anarchist militiamen in the Cárcel Modelo massacre.
Rico Avello was born on 20 December 1886 in Valdés, Asturias, the first of eleven siblings. His parents were José Rico GarcÃÂa-LañónâÂÂa well-to-do member of the Asturian bourgeoisie and later a republican mayor of ValdésâÂÂand Dolores Avello Suárez. In 1914, shortly after opening a law firm in Oviedo, Rico Avello married a second cousinâÂÂCastora Rico Rivas.
Rico Avello was elected to the Congress of Deputies for Oviedo in the 1931 Spanish general election as an 'independent federalist' on the electoral list of the RepublicanâÂÂSocialist Conjunction.
On 21 September 1933, Rico Avello was appointed Subsecretary for the Merchant Navy by Vicente Iranzo Enguita, Minister of the Navy. Shortly after his appointment as Subsecretary, Rico Avello vacated his seat in the Congress of DeputiesâÂÂas mandated by the 'Law of Incompatibilities'. He continued to serve as Subsecretary until shortly after his appointment as Minister of the Interior the next month.
On 8 October 1933, Rico Avello succeeded incoming Prime Minister Diego MartÃÂnez Barrio as Minister of the Interior. He continued to hold the position under MartÃÂnez' successor as Prime MinisterâÂÂAlejandro Lerroux. As Minister of the Interior, Rico Avello was criticised by members of the Civil Guard for a 'lack of consultation' in his attempts to reform the corps.
Lerroux described Rico Avello as "a man of 'good will', 'noble character' and 'good intentions'", but also as "'until yesterday a traditional cacique and now the guardian of electoral virtue'", and noted that his appointment was made as a result of President Acala Zamora's influence.
Rico Avello was appointed Spanish High Commissioner in Morocco on 23 January 1934. It has been suggested that Rico Avello was appointed High Commissioner 'as a means of removing him from a post [Minister of the Interior] in which his performance had been judged less than satisfactory', with Lerroux blaming both MartÃÂnez Barrio and Rico Avello for failing to provide the Radicals with a majority in the 1933 elections.
In early 1936, there existed speculation that President Niceto Alcalá-Zamora was on the verge of dismissing Prime Minister Manuel Azaña and appointing Rico Avello in his placeâÂÂat the head of a 'more responsible left Republican government'.
On 14 August 1936, Rico Avello and his son Carlos were arrested by agents of the Milicia Populare de InvestigaciónâÂÂa highly politicised and socialist controlled Civil War police brigade âÂÂand imprisoned in the Cárcel Modelo. On 22 August, a fire broke out in the Cárcel Modelo under uncertain circumstances and a 'mixed committee of leftist prison warders and militiamen' took control of the prison in the ensuring chaos. That same night Rico Avello and at least 23 other political prisoners were 'tried' and then shot in the basement of the Cárcel Modelo.