Los Angeles Times

Ex-Chilean leader Piñera killed in copter crash

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VIÑA DEL MAR, Chile — Sebastián Piñera, the twotime former president of Chile who faced social upheaval followed by a pandemic in his second term, died Tuesday in a helicopter crash. He was 74.

Chilean Interior Minister Carolina Tohá confirmed the death of the former president. No further details were immediatel­y released about the cause of the crash.

Serving as president from 2010 to 2014 and again from 2018 to 2022, he led the South American nation during devastatin­g natural disasters, including an earthquake and a tsunami.

He also governed during the COVID-19 pandemic and placed Chile among the top five countries for vaccinatio­n rates for the illness.

His legacy is marred by violent police repression in October 2019 against protesters who were demonstrat­ing against the country’s education, health and pension systems dating to the country’s 1973-1990 military dictatorsh­ip. Internatio­nal organizati­ons cited mass violations of human rights in the crackdown.

The social unrest ultimately led to two attempts to update the constituti­on inherited from the military government, but both failed.

Piñera’s death came as Chile was recovering from deadly wildfires in the county’s central region.

Chilean President Gabriel Boric honored Piñera in a speech Tuesday afternoon as a leader “seeking the best for his country,” highlighti­ng his management of the pandemic and other emergencie­s. “He was a democrat from the very first moment,” Boric said.

The death also drew an outpouring of condolence­s from leaders and former leaders across Latin America from both the left and right.

Piñera held the fifth-largest fortune in Chile, estimated at $3 billion. He worked as an academic at several universiti­es for almost 20 years and as a consultant for the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank and the World Bank.

As a businessma­n in the 1970s through the 1990s, he worked in a variety of industries, including real estate. He held shares in major airlines, telecommun­ication, real estate and electricit­y companies. He also created one of the largest credit card companies in the country. In 2009, he handed over the management of his businesses to others.

He entered politics representi­ng the center-right, which was the civilian support of the military regime. However, when he served as an independen­t senator, he voted against extending the presidency of dictator Augusto Pinochet, who ruled from 1973 to 1990.

Piñera ran three times for president. In 2006, he lost to Michelle Bachelet; four years later he defeated former President Eduardo Frei. Then, in 2018, he began a second four-year term after defeating the candidate from Bachelet’s coalition.

Twelve days before the beginning of his first term, an 8.8 magnitude earthquake and a tsunami claimed the lives of 525 people and devastated the infrastruc­ture of south-central Chile. Piñera’s government agenda was postponed to take on emergency reconstruc­tion.

Also in 2010, he oversaw the rescue of 33 miners trapped for 69 days at the bottom of a collapsed mine in the northern Atacama Desert. The rescue and the adverse conditions the miners survived captured the world’s attention.

One of Piñera’s last social media posts commemorat­ed their rescue.

“It was a song to life that inspired the world and showed the best of the Chileans’ mettle and the soul of our nation,” he wrote.

 ?? Esteban Felix Associated Press ?? A PORTRAIT of two-time Chilean President Sebastián Piñera, who died Tuesday, in the capital.
Esteban Felix Associated Press A PORTRAIT of two-time Chilean President Sebastián Piñera, who died Tuesday, in the capital.

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