Paraguayan presidential candidate Lino Oviedo, who helped lead a 1989 coup that overthrew dictator Alfredo Stroessner, died in a helicopter crash at the weekend.

A retired general known as a dynamic public speaker, 69-year-old Oviedo was running in the April presidential election in the landlocked, grains-exporting South American country.

Police rescuers found his body yesterday in the wreckage of a helicopter crash in northern Paraguay where he was travelling for a campaign event. The day, February 3, marked exactly 24 years since the coup that ended Stroessner’s 35-year dictatorship.

Oviedo’s popularity was based on the story - often repeated by his supporters but never independently verified - of him breaking into Stroessner’s bunker holding a grenade to force the dictator to surrender.

Polls showed he was in fourth or fifth place, with eight per cent support, going into the April election.

“On behalf of the Government, we send our sincere condolences to the family of General Lino Cesar Oviedo,” Paraguayan President Federico Franco said in a tweet.

The Government decreed three days of mourning and suspended all official activities.

Oviedo, who was fluent in the indigenous “Guarani” language spoken in Paraguay’s poor neighborhoods, was accused of plotting to overthrow governments in the 1990s and sentenced to 10 years in jail.

He was pardoned before completing the term and returned to politics as leader of the conservative National Union of Ethical Citizens party.

“He is a person who unquestionably figures in our country’s history, with all its light and shadows,”said Paraguay’s Communications Minister Gustavo Kohn.

The latest photos on Oviedo’s Facebook page show him wearing a straw hat and plaid shirt, speaking on Saturday at a political rally in the northern province of Concepcion.

Interior Minister Carmelo Caballero said the Government would investigate the crash, which occurred on Saturday night as Oviedo was flying back to capital Asuncion in adverse weather.

Paraguay’s previous president, Fernando Lugo, was removed from power by Congress in June when lawmakers voted to remove him for failing to keep the peace after 17 police and peasant farmers died in clashes over a land eviction.

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