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Jailed Bolivian ex-dictator Luis Garcia Meza dies at 88

April 30, 2018 12:49 pm | Updated 12:53 pm IST - LA PAZ:

He was serving his long term in prison for crimes committed after his 1980 military coup

In this January 17, 1997 photo, Bolivia’s jailed, ex-dictator Luis Garcia Meza is surrounded by police as he leaves the Copacabana clinic in La Paz, Bolivia after being hospitalized 72 hours for cardiac problems. The former military dictator, who was serving a 30-year prison sentence for a dozen murders carried out during his thirteen months in office from 1980-1981, died on April 29, 2018. (FILE)

Bolivian ex-dictator Luis Garcţa Meza, who was serving a lengthy prison sentence for crimes committed after his 1980 military coup, died on Sunday in a La Paz hospital at the age of 88, his attorney told local media.

The frail Garcia Meza died of cardiac arrest and respiratory failure at the Cossmil military hospital in La Paz, where the former general had spent more than a third of his 30-year prison sentence, attorney Frank Campero said.

Garcia Meza took power in a violent military coup in July 1980, near the end of the period of military dictatorships in Latin America.

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People died in droves under him

Scores of people were killed as his forces seized power, including historian and socialist leader Marcelo Quiroga Santa Cruz, whose body was never found.

A fierce anti-communist, Garcia Meza cracked down on leftist dissent and tortured opponents, but his regime was also closely associated with drug-traffickers. He eventually resigned after 13 months in power.

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In April 1993, Garcia Meza was sentenced to 30 years behind bars for the killings and abuses during his time in office, but he avoided prison by fleeing the country.

He was hiding in Brazil

Authorities caught up with him in Brazil in March 1996. He was quickly arrested and extradited to Bolivia, where he was placed in a maximum security prison.

The ex-dictators interior minister, Luis Arce Gonez — nicknamed the “minister of cocaine” — served a drug-trafficking sentence in a US prison that ended in 2009. He was then sent to Bolivia to serve a separate 30-year sentence for human rights abuses.

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