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Noriega critical after brain surgery

Former Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega is in an induced coma after suffering a haemorrhage during brain surgery.

Former Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega
Former Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega is critical after suffering a haemorrhage during surgery. (AAP)

Panamanian former dictator, CIA spy and convicted cocaine trafficker Manuel Noriega is in a coma after suffering a haemorrhage from an operation to remove a benign brain tumour.

"He has a major brain haemorrhage and is in serious condition," his daughter Lorena Noriega told reporters outside the Santo Tomas hospital where he was operated on, describing his state as "critical".

The ex-Panamanian leader underwent a second operation that stopped the bleeding, his lawyer Ezra Angel said, adding that his client was in an induced coma.

Noriega ruled Panama from 1983 to 1989, spying for the Central Intelligence Agency before the United States invaded in 1989, toppling his brutal regime and ending a drug trafficking career that associated him with Colombian kingpin Pablo Escobar.

Noriega was initially sentenced in the United States in 1992 and is currently serving time for murder in Panama. Judicial authorities had granted Noriega a period of house arrest until April 28 to undergo the operation.

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As military ruler of the Central American country, Noriega made world headlines as his relationship with Washington soured, prompting the United States to send in nearly 28,000 troops to seize Panama City and capture him in a house-to-house hunt.

Noriega orchestrated the disappearance of scores of opponents, some of whose bodies later turned up in exhumations at the former Tocumen military base, bound and showing signs of torture.

High blood pressure may have contributed to the haemorrhage, Angel said.


2 min read

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Source: AAP



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