Venezuelans pray as Chavez health worsens
2013-01-01 10:30
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Caracas - Backers of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez prayed and called off
New Year's Eve festivities on Monday as the cancer-stricken leftist leader took
a turn for the worse, fuelling doubts about his political future.
Venezuelans prayed in church and a downtown square after the government
announced that Chavez suffered "new complications" from a respiratory
infection following his fourth cancer-related surgery on 11 December in Cuba.
His vice president and political heir, Nicolas Maduro, broke the news from
Havana on Sunday night, saying the condition of the 58-year-old leader was
delicate and that he faced an uphill battle.
Maduro decided to stay in Cuba for "the next few hours" to check
on the ubiquitous "Comandante," the face of the Latin American left
and fierce critic of the United States who has led the oil-rich nation for 14
years.
Rumours
Jorge Arreaza, Venezuela's science and technology minister as well as the
president's son in law, took to Twitter to try to tamp down rampant social
media speculation that the end might be near, or had already come.
"My fellow countrymen: do not believe ill-intentioned rumours.
President Chavez has spent the day calmly and stable, with his children at his
side," said Arreaza who is in Cuba with other family members.
Back in Caracas, crews took down the stage of a downtown concert site while
Information Minister Ernesto Villegas invited Venezuelans to gather at Plaza
Bolivar to "pray with joy and optimism" for Chavez.
"I deeply love him and would give my life for him. There should be
millions like Chavez," Haydee Dominguez, a 50-year-old secretary, said at
the gathering led by Villegas.
Others teared up at the San Francisco church while several ministers
attended a special mass for Chavez at the Miraflores presidential palace at
midday.
At a meeting point for Chavez followers in Plaza Bolivar,
"Chavistas" choked up as they contemplated the health of their
leader.
"We are all praying for the health of our comandante," said
Miriam, one of the people gathered at the square. "There can't be any
party here."
Election
Chavez had declared himself cancer free in July, more than a year after
being diagnosed with the disease in the pelvic region. The exact nature of the
cancer has never been made public.
He was re-elected in October but announced a relapse earlier this month and
rushed to Cuba for another operation.
On Monday on Twitter, hashtags translating into expressions such as
"Chavez will live and conquer" and "I love Chavez" were
numerous, while others speculated about his health.
One of the people discussing Chavez's health was Jose Rafael Marquina, a
Venezuelan doctor who lives in the United States and has claimed in the past to
have reliable sources informing him about the president.
"The respiratory failure continues without any improvement and the
kidney function continues to deteriorate," he wrote on Twitter.
The government has denied such rumours.
Opposition
Chavez is scheduled to be sworn in on January 10 but the government has
indicated that the ceremony could be postponed if the president is not fit by
then.
Opposition leader Henrique Capriles, who lost to Chavez in the 7 October election,
predicted on Monday that there would be "big changes" in 2013.
The opposition coalition, Democratic Unity Table, called for dialogue with
the government to deal with what it called an "emergency".
Veppex, a Miami-based association of 25 000 Venezuelans living outside their
country as refugees or political exiles, insisted the constitution must be
respected verbatim and new elections held if Chavez is indisposed.
Under Venezuela's constitution, a presidential election must be held within
30 days if the head of state is incapacitated or dies before his inauguration
or within the first four years of his term.
Swearing in
The government is trying to work out how to "resolve that obstacle",
said Luis Vicente Leon, head of pollsters Datanalisis, who said it was clear
now that Chavez was in a critical condition.
As the constitution says he must be sworn in on 10 January, "anything
else will be hard to sell without it being construed as an institutional coup",
Leon said.
But Maduro and parliament speaker Diosdado Cabello have left the door open
for Chavez to be sworn in at a later date by the Supreme Court.
Cabello has even said that new elections will not be convened on 10 Januar,
nor will he himself take over temporarily, as the constitution stipulates, if
Chavez is out of the picture.