At the age of 83, Panamanian dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega,
At the age of 83, Panamanian dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega, once known as "The Strong Man of Panama" died.
The news was confirmed on Monday evening to journalist Álvaro Alvarado by medical staff of the Hospital Santo Tomás, where he was being kept under intensive care and by Health Minister Miguel Mayo himself.
Noriega was subjected on Tuesday March 7 of this year to surgery to remove a benign tumor that had in the brain. Hours later returned to the operating room for a second operation for a bleeding that presented, since then remained under deep sedation.
His critical condition was confirmed by his daughter Sandra Noriega, who at that time explained to the media that the exdicer had a cerebral hemorrhage and was totally inflamed.
The bleeding was controlled, and remained sedated until Friday, March 10, according to his lawyer and spokesman, Ezra Angel. Since then they maintained a reserved forecast for the media.
Noriega left the penitentiary El Renacer on January 28, after receiving house arrest for three months, for preparations prior to surgery and post-operative care.
There he was serving sentences for the murders of Hugo Spadafora, whose body was beheaded in September 1985; Moses Giroldi, who led a gopista attempt on October 3, 1989 and the 1989 Albrook Massacre.
Recently, the compliance judge in the province of Chiriquí had approved the one-year extension of the temporary measure of house arrest to Noriega for the crime against life and personal integrity to the detriment of Hugo Spadafora.
While in the case of the so-called "Albrook Massacre", which occurred on October 3, 1989, the First Circuit Judicial Compliance Court decided to keep the temporary hospital deposit measure undated and subject to medical review.
Noriega served sentences in Miami, United States on drug charges and in France for the crime of money laundering. After 22 years without stepping on Panamanian soil,
Noriega returned to the extradited country of France in December 2011.
The news was confirmed on Monday evening to journalist Álvaro Alvarado by medical staff of the Hospital Santo Tomás, where he was being kept under intensive care and by Health Minister Miguel Mayo himself.
His critical condition was confirmed by his daughter Sandra Noriega, who at that time explained to the media that the exdicer had a cerebral hemorrhage and was totally inflamed.
The bleeding was controlled, and remained sedated until Friday, March 10, according to his lawyer and spokesman, Ezra Angel. Since then they maintained a reserved forecast for the media.
There he was serving sentences for the murders of Hugo Spadafora, whose body was beheaded in September 1985; Moses Giroldi, who led a gopista attempt on October 3, 1989 and the 1989 Albrook Massacre.
Recently, the compliance judge in the province of Chiriquí had approved the one-year extension of the temporary measure of house arrest to Noriega for the crime against life and personal integrity to the detriment of Hugo Spadafora.
Noriega served sentences in Miami, United States on drug charges and in France for the crime of money laundering. After 22 years without stepping on Panamanian soil,
Noriega returned to the extradited country of France in December 2011.
No hay comentarios