Cancer doctor Tabare Vazquez was sworn in as Uruguay's new president Sunday, returning to office a decade after first leading the left to power. Vazquez took the oath of office in the National Assembly before a crowd that included Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Cuban President Raul Castro and other regional leaders.
He then headed to a ceremony at Independence Square in the capital Montevideo to receive the presidential sash from fellow leftist Jose "Pepe" Mujica, sealing their Broad Front (FA) party's hold on power for another five years in this country that bars presidents from serving consecutive terms. The ceremony draws a curtain on former guerrilla fighter Mujica's colorful rule. During his five years in office, the 79-year-old rabble-rouser legalised marijuana, gay marriage and abortion, railed against global inequality and attracted international attention for living in a modest farm house, driving a beat-up Volkswagen Beetle and giving most of his salary to charity.
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