USA TODAY International Edition

Manuel Noriega, ex- Panamanian dictator, dies at 83

- Charles Ventura

Manuel Antonio Noriega, the former Panamanian dictator who was ousted from power by a U. S. invasion in 1989, has died. He was 83.

Panama’s President Juan Carlos Varela announced Noriega’s death on Twitter on Tuesday, saying it “closes a chapter” in the country’s history. Miguel Mayo, Panama’s health minister, also confirmed Noriega’s death, Telemetro. com reported.

Noriega died from a hemor- rhage following surgery to remove a brain tumor.

The former general — a onetime U. S. ally who ruled Panama with an iron fist from 1983 until 1989 — served a 17- year sentence for drug traffickin­g and money laundering in the United States after his ouster. After he completed that sentence in 2007, he was imprisoned in France for money laundering, before being returned in 2011 to Panama, where he had already been convicted in absentia.

Noriega accused Washington of a “conspiracy” to keep him behind bars and tied his legal troubles to his refusal to cooperate with a U. S. plan aimed at toppling Nicaragua’s leftist Sandinista government in the 1980s.

Following Noriega’s ouster Panama underwent huge changes, taking over the Panama Canal from U. S. control in 1999, expanding the waterway and enjoying a boom in tourism and real estate.

Today, the nation has little in common with the bombed- out neighborho­ods where Noriega hid during the 1989 invasion by the U. S. military, before being famously smoked out of his refuge at the Vatican Embassy by loud music blared by U. S. troops.

During the operation, 23 U. S. military personnel died and 320 were wounded, and the Pentagon estimated 200 Panamanian civilians and 314 soldiers were killed.

Noriega was born poor in Panama City on Feb. 11, 1934, and was raised by foster parents.

In recent years, Noriega, who was known as “Pineapple Face” for his pockmarked complexion, had suffered various ailments, including high blood pressure and bronchitis. He spent the final years of his life in a Panamanian prison for the murder of political opponents during his six- year reign.

 ?? JONATHAN UTZ, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Manuel Noriega, a onetime U. S. ally who ruled Panama from 1983 until 1989, served a 17- year sentence for drug traffickin­g and money laundering in the United States.
JONATHAN UTZ, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Manuel Noriega, a onetime U. S. ally who ruled Panama from 1983 until 1989, served a 17- year sentence for drug traffickin­g and money laundering in the United States.

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