Chile’s former president Sebastián Piñera dies in helicopter crash

Local media reports the accident occurred in Lago Ranco in the south of the country. Argentina’s Lower House held a minute of silence in Piñera’s honor

FILE PHOTO: Chile's President Sebastian Pinera delivers a statement at the Government house in Santiago, Chile, October 4, 2021. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

Former Chilean president Sebastián Piñera died in a helicopter crash on Tuesday afternoon in the southern region of Los Ríos, government officials have confirmed. 

Chile’s national disaster agency SENAPRAD confirmed that a helicopter crash had occurred in the southern town of Lago Ranco and that one person had been killed and three people injured. 

Interior Minister Carolina Toha said the ex-president’s body had been recovered from the lake, near the town of Lago Ranco.

Piñera often spent the Southern Hemisphere summers near the picturesque lakes that dot Chile’s south, and frequently piloted his own helicopter.

President Javier Milei’s press office published a brief communiqué expressing condolences to Piñera’s “family, friends, and the Chilean people.” Argentina’s Lower House, which was in the middle of debating Milei’s omnibus bill, held a minute of silence in Piñera’s honor.

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.

“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.

Piñera 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, Piñera 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 Milei.

Former Argentine President Mauricio Macri expressed his sadness at the news of Piñera’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.

The son of a prominent centrist politician, Piñera was a Harvard-trained economist who made his fortune introducing credit cards to Chile in the 1980s.

He was also a major shareholder in the flagship airline formerly known as LAN, local soccer team Colo-Colo, and a television station, although he sold most of those holdings when he took over the presidency in March 2010. As of 2024, he was ranked 1,176 on Forbes’ global rich list, with a net worth of US$2.7 billion.

Deep-sea diving

Known for a driven and competitive personality, one friend described Piñera as someone who could be a bully, reluctant to delegate responsibility. He was also a risk-taker who enjoyed deep-sea diving.

Running for election to the presidency after a spell as a center-right senator, he wooed moderate voters by portraying himself as the leader of a new right and an entrepreneur who made his fortune with hard work.

At the same time, he distanced himself from the 1973-1990 rule of General Augusto Pinochet, when more than 3,000 suspected leftists were killed or forcibly disappeared.

He lost his first attempt at the top job in 2005 to popular center-left leader Michelle Bachelet, but she was barred constitutionally from running for a second consecutive term and in 2009 he beat ex-president Eduardo Frei by a small margin.

That ended the 20-year rule of the center-left and fended off the bitter memories of Pinochet’s bloody dictatorship that had hurt the right in past elections.

His honeymoon with the electorate was short-lived, though, and his stiff manner contrasted with the more amiable Bachelet, who both preceded and succeeded him as president.

Despite plaudits for his government’s economic record, many Chileans felt he did not do enough to tackle deep inequality or address inadequacies in the country’s education system.

Piñera and his wife Cecilia Morel had four children.

You may also be interested in: ‘The country’s on fire’: wildfires hit every province in Argentina in 2022

—Herald/Reuters

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