This Saturday, Marcelo Nougué passed away due to a heart attackagricultural engineer and spokesperson for the Un Solo Uruguay movement (USU), the one that integrated since its creation. She was 50 years old.
The news was reported by various media outlets inside and confirmed to The Observer by Guillermo Franchi, also a spokesman for the movement.
“We’re just falling, we can’t believe it, it’s terrible, unexpectedwhat’s more It hurts you that it happens to a loved guy, with a brutal intellectual honesty, with an absolute lack of interest in his own when you had to put your shoulder to support others“, said.
Franco commented that As soon as it can be managed with the rest of Nougué’s friends “the recognition that a person of his human quality deserves”.
“We were partners practically throughout my college career, when he did his best to make Un Solo Uruguay what it became and he was a tremendous pillar, I was not surprised, I already knew his willingness to prioritize others first; without a doubt he was a good fat man, very good, ”he concluded in the midst of obvious sadness.
Diego Battiste
Nougué together with Franchi in one of the conferences given by USU.
In an interview he gave to The Observerfor the Agro supplement, Nougué said that he was born on June 16, 1971, in Montevideo and that he lived in Paysandú with Rosario, his partner. He had a son from a first marriage, two of hers with Rosario, and he also lived with two other children of hers. He was an agronomist, advisor to producers and a merchant in the sector of supplies and services for agriculture.
About his hobbies, he then said: “I love soccer, but I’m like a circus bike: I don’t have a frame.”
– #UnSoloUruguay (@UnsoloUruguay) March 12, 2022
The journalist Álvaro Aguiar reported the details of the wake.
The agricultural engineer Marcelo Nougué, spokesman for @UnsoloUruguay.
San José garage wake from 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Paysandu. RIP pic.twitter.com/JihdfwcGuZ– Alvaro Aguiar (@infoaguiar) March 12, 2022
In August 2021 was the last time he published a column in La Tribuna of the Agro supplement from The Observer, something that he did on a regular basis. he titled it Inertia and in it he considered the issue of fuels.