Vinicio Gómez

Carlos Vinicio Gómez Ruiz (23 October 1961 – 27 June 2008) was a Guatemalan politician; at the time of his death, aged 48, he was serving as the country's interior minister (ministro de gobernación).

Career

Vinicio Gómez studied dental surgery at the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. In the late 1980s he entered public service, with a series of appointments in the security services, specialising in criminalistics, anti-drug efforts, and combating organised crime.[1]

He was appointed interior minister in January 2008 when President Álvaro Colom took office. He had previously served as deputy minister in the government of Óscar Berger.[2]

Death

Gómez died in a helicopter crash in the central department of Baja Verapaz along with deputy minister Édgar Hernández Umaña and the helicopter's two pilots. The authorities lost radio contact with the aircraft at 1308 local time (1908 GMT) on Friday, 27 June 2008. It disappeared over Alta Verapaz department en route to Guatemala City from Petén in the north and was later found to have crashed in the municipality of Purulhá at a location some 75 km from departmental capital Salamá. It is thought that the crash was caused by bad weather. The officials were on their way to a regional security meeting.

As a result of the incident, Álvaro Colom returned home early from a MexicoCentral American summit under the aegis of the Tuxtla Mechanism in Villahermosa, Tabasco.[3] Three days of national mourning were declared and both functionaries were posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit.[4]

References

Wikinews has related news: Guatemalan minister killed in helicopter crash
  1. El ministro guatemalteco fallecido cambió la odontología por la criminalística EFE, 28 June 2008. Retrieved on 28 June 2008
  2. "Guatemala minister dies in crash". BBC News. 2008-06-27. Retrieved 2008-06-27.
  3. Gobierno de Guatemala decretó tres días de duelo Prensa Libre, 28 June 2008. Retrieved on 28 June 2008.
  4. Rendirán homenaje póstumo a ministro de Gobernación de Guatemala Prensa Libre, 29 June 2008. Retrieved on 29 June 2008.