Vanuatu’s president, Lonsdale dies of heart attack
The President of Vanuatu, Baldwin Lonsdale, has died of a heart attack, the Vanuatu Daily Post reported Saturday. He was 67.
Lonsdale,
who sacked his government two years ago over a massive corruption
scandal, passed away in the Pacific island nation’s capital of Port
Vila, the AFP reported.
“National Flag is at half staff early this morning. His body is reportedly at the Vila Central Hospital,” the newspaper said.
Former Vanuatu MP Sela Molisa told Radio New Zealand that “Vanuatu has lost one of its greatest leaders.”
Lonsdale, a civil servant before becoming an Anglican priest, was elected to the presidency in 2014.
Although
the role was considered largely ceremonial, Lonsdale became a symbol of
hope for Vanuatu when Cyclone Pam caused severe damage in the country
in early 2015.
Six
months later he steered the country through a political crisis when
half the government of prime minster Sato Kilman was convicted of
corruption, making them ineligible for office.
After
one of the convicted MPs, then-speaker of parliament Marcellino Pipite,
pardoned himself and 13 colleagues in his capacity as acting president
while Lonsdale was overseas, Lonsdale returned to dissolve parliament
and call a snap election which saw Kilman’s government defeated.
“He
was firm and wouldn’t be swayed,” Molisa said. “I’m sure the government
and every other — especially at the political level — people would
recognise that Vanuatu has lost a very outstanding leader.”
NAN
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