Pires was born in São Filipe, Fogo, Cape Verde to Luís Rodrigues Pires and wife Maria Fidalga Lopes. Later, he studied at
Liceu Gil Eanes (Old High School) and
Escola Jorge Barbosa in Mindelo during the 1950s and later abroad at the
University of Lisbon in Portugal at the
Faculty of Sciences. He fled to Conakry in 1962, then Ghana and afterwards headed to Algeria; he was trained in Cuba, the Soviet Union and Guinea-Bissau. He attended the Second PAIGC Congress in 1973. Before independence, he returned to Praia, Cape Verde on a Portuguese military ship on October 13, 1974.
Prime minister Three days after the country became independent in 1975, he became the first prime minister of Cape Verde; the nation at the time was a one-party state under the rule of the
African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV). He opposed
apartheid in South Africa and opposed foreign intervention in Africa. On October 20–22, 1980, he visited Paris. He visited that city again in 1989 and met with French prime minister
Michel Rocard on 11 May 1989. He held additional portfolio of
Minister of Finance from 1986 to 1990. After the ruling PAICV decided to institute multiparty democracy in February 1990, Pires replaced President
Aristides Pereira as General Secretary of PAICV in August 1990. The PAICV lost the multiparty parliamentary and presidential elections held in early 1991 and was left in opposition.
After being Prime Minister At a party congress in August 1993, Pires was replaced as General Secretary by
Aristides Lima and was instead elected as President of PAICV. As a candidate for the party presidency at PAICV's September 1997 congress, he faced
José Maria Neves and prevailed with 68% of the vote. He stepped down as PAICV President in 2000 in preparation for a presidential bid in the next year's election and he was succeeded by Neves. Pires was the PAICV candidate in the
February 2001 presidential election, defeating former prime minister
Carlos Veiga of the
Movement for Democracy (MpD) in the second round by just 12 votes. Pires took office on March 22; the MpD boycotted his inauguration, saying that the election was marred by a "non-transparent process". As president, Pires appointed Neves as prime minister. On June 7, 2005, the president paid hommage to
Sergio Frusoni and declared him one of the Greatest Crioulo poets. Days later on 16 and 17 June, he met and talked with the French Minister of Cooperation
Brigitte Girardin in Praia for discussions with the Europe Union for obtaining special status, fight against insecurity. When he was president, in October 2005, he visited Brazil, the capital city Brasília and met the president at the time
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. He ran for a second term in the
presidential election held on 12 February 2006 and again prevailed over Veiga, this time winning in the first round by a 51%-49% margin. ==Personal life==