Hugo Chávez: Venezuela begins seven days of mourning after president dies in Caracas
6 Maret 2013
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Venezuelans began seven days of painful and public mourning on Tuesday night after the announcement that their president, Hugo Chávez, had died aged 58 after a long battle against cancer.
The
 country's vice-president, Nicolás Maduro – tipped as a likely successor
 – broke the news on Tuesday night, prompting a wave of grief in the 
nation's streets.
"We have just received the most tragic and awful information. At 4.25pm, President Hugo Chávez Frias died," Maduro announced in a televised address, his voice choking. "It's a moment of deep pain," he said.
Chávez
 died at a military hospital in Caracas, the capital of the country he 
has ruled since 1999. As soon as the news was announced, supporters 
gathered at the city's main square, Plaza Bolivar, and began chanting: 
"Chávez vive, la lucha sigue" – "Chávez lives, the battle continues."
People
 wearing the red beret the president was known for sang a popular folk 
song with the words: "Those who die for life cannot be called dead."
As
 messages of condolence came from many world leaders, perhaps the most 
significant was from Barack Obama. He said: "At this challenging time of
 President Hugo Chávez's passing, the United States reaffirms its 
support for the Venezuelan people and its interest in developing a 
constructive relationship with the 
Venezuelan government. As Venezuela
 begins a new chapter in its history, the US remains committed to 
policies that promote democratic principles, the rule of law and respect
 for human rights."
Chávez, the symbol of Latin American 
socialism, succumbed to a respiratory infection on Tuesday evening, 21 
months after he first revealed he had a tumour. He had not been seen in 
public for three months since emergency surgery in Cuba on 11 December.
He
 will be given a state funeral in Caracas on Friday, likely to be 
attended by millions of supporters and leftwing leaders from across the 
globe who have been inspired by Chávez's doctrine of "Bolivarian 
21st-century socialism", grateful for the subsidised energy he provided 
or simply impressed by his charisma. 
His death will also trigger a 
presidential election, to be held within 30 days, to decide who controls
 the world's greatest untapped reserves of oil.
His designated successor, Maduro, is likely to face Henrique Capriles, the losing opposition candidate in the presidential election
 held a few months ago in October 2012. Until then, according to the 
constitution, the interim president should be the head of the national 
assembly, Diosdado Cabello. However on Tuesday night the Venezuelan 
foreign minister, Elias Jaua, said Maduro was the interim president. It 
was not clear whether this would only apply until the official calling 
of the election and beginning of the campaign, or whether Maduro would 
remain in charge until the election result was determined.
Robert 
Menendez, chairman of the US Senate foreign relations committee, called 
for free and fair elections to replace Chávez. "Hugo Chavez ruled 
Venezuela with an iron hand and his passing has left a political void 
that we hope will be filled peacefully and through a constitutional and 
democratic process, grounded in the Venezuelan constitution and adhering
 to the Inter-American Democratic Charter."
Replacing one of most 
colourful figures on the global political landscape will be an immense 
challenge. Born to a poor family on the plains, Chávez became a tank 
commander and a devotee of South America's liberator, Simón Bolívar. A 
failed coup in 1992 propelled him into the limelight but it was his 
ballot box triumphs that made him an inspiration for the resurgent Latin
 American left and the most outspoken – and often humorous – critic of 
the US, the war in Iraq and George Bush, whom he described as a "donkey"
 and a "devil". Formerly one of the most dynamic political leaders in 
the world with a globe-trotting schedule and a weekly, unscripted TV 
broadcast – often hours long – Chávez shocked his countrymen in June 
2011 when he revealed that Cuban surgeons had removed a baseball-sized 
tumour from his pelvic region.
After that, he underwent several 
rounds of chemotherapy and two more operations in what he described as a
 "battle for health and for life". His medical records were never made 
public, prompting widespread speculation about his imminent demise, but 
he and his supporters insisted he was recovering. Before the 
presidential election in October 2012, aides claimed he was well enough 
to complete a full term. During that campaign, Chávez was clearly 
affected by his illness. But although he made fewer and shorter 
appearances, he won more votes than in any of his earlier elections 
battles, prompting him to proclaim victory in a "perfect battle".
Fears
 about his health escalated after he rushed to Cuba for hyperbaric 
oxygen treatment on 27 November. Less than a fortnight later, he made a 
televised address in which he said that doctors had discovered malignant
 cells that required surgery and urged Venezuelans to vote for Maduro if
 he was incapacitated.
Since his operation in December, Chávez has
 been visited by family members and several of his closest political 
allies, including Fidel and Raul Castro of Cuba, Ecuadorean president 
Rafael Correa and Bolivian president Evo Morales.
Beyond a set of 
four photographs released last month that showed a remarkably hearty 
looking Chávez smiling in a hospital bed and flanked by his daughters, 
the president has not been seen or heard for three months. This prompted
 frequent rumours that the president was dead or on life support. The 
government denied this and said he continued to run the country by 
writing down his orders.
But officials acknowledged that Chávez 
suffered multiple complications after his surgery including respiratory 
infections and bleeding. He had to undergo more chemotherapy and drug 
treatments and could only breathe through a tracheal tube. He returned 
from Cuba on 18 February at his own request, said officials. Since then 
he has been treated at Carlos Arvelo military hospital in Caracas.
Hopes
 for a recovery dimmed on Monday, when minister of communications, 
Ernesto Villegas, said the president's condition had declined due to a 
"new and serious respiratory infection."
Constitutional questions 
have been raised by his long hospitalisation and absence from public 
life, which he formerly dominated with dynamic and provocative 
appearances on his weekly television address, Hello Mr President.
When
 he failed to attend his scheduled inauguration on 10 January, the 
opposition asked who is running the country. The ruling party responded 
with a rally of more than 100,000 supporters, many carrying banners 
declaring "We are Chávez."
Source: The Guardian

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