Joaquín Salvador Lavado, better known as Quino,
recently suffered a stroke and, despite the fact that doctors
managed to temporarily stabilize him, his condition worsened,
local media reported.
"Quino died. All the good people in the country and the world
will mourn him," said Daniel Divinsky, his long-time editor, on
Twitter.
Quino created Mafalda, an Argentine girl of about five or six
with bulging black hair and strong political views. The cartoon
was eventually published in 27 languages.
He was able to use Mafalda's apparent innocence to spread
scathing criticism of the dictatorships that plagued Latin
America from the 1960s, including Argentina's 1966-1973 military
dictatorship.
After a failed 1987 coup against President Raul Alfonsin, Quino
published a cartoon of Mafalda saying "Yes to democracy! Yes to
justice! Yes to freedom! Yes to life!"
(Reporting by Lucila Sigal, writing by Hugh Bronstein; Editing
by Steve Orlofsky)
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