World

Oliver Sanchez, sick Venezuelan boy who protested national medicine shortage, dies

Venezuelans are expressing dismay over the death of an eight-year-old boy with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who had become a symbol of the crisis-wracked nation's collapsed health-care system.

8-year-old child has become a symbol of the country's crisis-plagued health-care system

In this Feb. 26, 2016 file photo, Oliver Sanchez, diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, holds a sign with a message that reads in Spanish: 'I want a cure, peace and health' during a protest against the growing shortage of medicines and medical supplies, in Caracas, Venezuela. The eight-year-old boy, who had become a symbol of Venezuela's medical crisis, died Tuesday, May 24, 2016. (Ariana Cubillos/Associated Press)

Venezuelans are expressing dismay over the death of an eight-year-old boy with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who had become a symbol of the crisis-wracked nation's collapsed health care system.

Oliver Sanchez gained fame in February when he appeared with his mother at a demonstration to protest medicine shortages wearing a mask and holding up a homemade sign reading, "I want a cure, peace and health."

Sanchez died Tuesday, sparking outrage on social media and in congress. Opposition lawmakers in the National Assembly held up pictures of the second-grader to denounce what they called an avoidable death. A popular cartoonist dedicated a drawing to him dressed as an angel with a white dove in his hands.

The boy's mother, Mitzaida Berroteran, told local newspaper El Nacional that in the absence of readily-available and affordable drugs she had to scour social media for donations.

"Each time they prescribed us something we had to run," said Berroteran, who thinks her son contracted a deadly bacteria while interned in a public hospital in western Caracas.

Low oil prices and a deep recession are causing widespread shortages in the South American nation, with everything from prescription medicines to basic foodstuffs going scarce.