Alfredo Poveda Burbano (born Jan. 24, 1926, Ambato, Ecuador—died June 7, 1990, Miami, Fla., U.S.) was the head of the military junta that overthrew the regime of Ecuadorian President Guillermo Rodríguez Lara in a bloodless coup on Jan. 11, 1976, and held power until the return to civilian rule in 1979. Poveda was vice admiral of the navy at the time.
Poveda was educated at the Ecuadorian and Argentine naval academies, at the Royal Naval Gunnery School in England, and at the Brazilian Naval War College. From 1973 to 1975 he was minister of the interior, a position regarded as second in authority to the presidency. He also served as chief of the armed forces (1975–76) and as the Ecuadorian naval commander (1975–79). Frustrated by the economic ineptitude of the regime of Lara, who himself had seized power in a 1972 military coup, Poveda and other military officers overthrew it, promising a return to civilian rule within two years. Although in theory Ecuador was ruled by a triumvirate composed of Poveda, Guillermo Durán Arcentales, and Luis Leoro Franco, in reality Poveda ruled alone. He was one of the five Andean leaders who, on Aug. 8, 1978, signed the Declaration of Bogotá, which restated the intentions of the Andean group to seek further economic integration. He ensured the orderly transfer of power to the democratically elected regime of Jaime Roldós Aguilera by insisting repeatedly that the armed forces’ decision to surrender power to the winner of the election held on April 29, 1979, was irrevocable. When Roldós assumed power four months later, Poveda resigned as head of the navy.