Ex-Chile president, Sebastian Pinera, dies in helicopter crash
Chilean ex-President Sebastian Pinera died in a helicopter crash on Tuesday, causing the country he served for two terms to mourn and generating an outpouring of condolences from politicians throughout Latin America.
The helicopter carrying Pinera, 74, and three passengers crashed into a lake in southern Chile. The former president was pronounced dead immediately after rescuers got on the site. The remaining three passengers survived.
Two sources told Reuters that Pinera was the pilot, but officials have not confirmed this or the helicopter’s intended destination.
Pinera spent the Southern Hemisphere summers in the gorgeous lakes that dot Chile’s south, and he frequently operated his own helicopter.
President Gabriel Boric declared three days of national mourning, while preparations have begun for a state funeral on Friday for the former leader, who served two non-consecutive terms between 2010 and 2022.
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Interior Minister Carolina Toha said the ex-president’s body had been recovered from the lake, near the town of Lago Ranco.
“We remember him for the way he dedicated his life to public service,” said Toha, who has been helping to lead efforts to battle deadly wildfires in recent days.
Pinera was perhaps best known abroad for his role overseeing the spectacular rescue in 2010 of 33 miners who were trapped underneath the Atacama desert. The event became a global media sensation and was the subject of a 2014 movie, “The 33.”
In Chile, he was known as a successful businessman whose first term was boosted by rapid economic growth but who was often seen as out-of-touch with the country’s fast-changing society.
Both his presidencies were marred by frequent protests – of students demanding education reform in the first term, and of wider and often violent protests against inequality in his second term that ended with the government promising to draft a new constitution.
After leaving the presidency, Pinera remained active in politics, speaking out on issues like the attempt to draft a new constitution – which ultimately failed – and backing conservative politicians in the region, including Argentine President Javier Milei.
Former Argentine President Mauricio Macri expressed his sadness at the news of Pinera’s death. “He was a good person, committed like no one else to Chile and to the values of freedom and democracy in Latin America,” he said.
(Reuters)
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