Venezuela rejects ‘absurd’ rumors over Chavez death

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Senior aides and relatives of Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez countered yesterday a crescendo of rumours that the socialist president may be dead from cancer, saying he was still battling for his life.

“There he is, continuing his fight, his battle, and we are sure of victory!” his older brother Adan Chavez, the governor of Barinas state, told cheering supporters.

Speculation about Chavez, 58, hit fever pitch this week, fed in part by assertions from Panama’s former ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS), Guillermo Cochez, that the Venezuelan leader had died.

“The launching of absurd and bizarre rumours by the right wing simply discredits them and isolates them further from the people,” Chavez’s son-in-law Jorge Arreaza, who is also the country’s science minister, said on Twitter.

Apart from one set of photos showing Chavez lying in a hospital bed, he has not been seen nor heard from in public since Dec. 11 cancer surgery in Cuba, his fourth such operation.

The president made a surprise pre-dawn return to a military hospital in Caracas last week, with none of the fanfare that had accompanied his previous homecomings after treatment.

Vice President Nicolas Maduro, the OPEC nation’s de facto leader and Chavez’s preferred successor, said several times this week that the president was fighting for life and urged Venezuelans to be patient.

Opposition politicians accuse the government of being deceitful about Chavez’s condition, and compare the secrecy over his medical details with the transparency shown by other Latin American leaders who have suffered cancer. Cochez said Chavez’s relatives had switched off his life support several days ago after he had been in a vegetative state since the end of December. He challenged Venezuela’s government to prove him wrong by showing the president in public. Across the South American nation of 29 million people, Venezuelans are extremely anxious, speculating almost non-stop about Chavez’s condition and wondering what the potential end of his 14-year rule might mean for them.

Adding to the tension, several dozen opposition-supporting students have chained themselves together in a Caracas street, demanding to see the president and arguing that Maduro has no right to rule because he was not elected.

With everyone on edge, the relatively routine shooting by police of a murder suspect during a gun battle in downtown Caracas yesterday forced Information Minister Ernesto Villegas to take to Twitter to issue reassurances.

“(Some people) took advantage of the episode to try to sow panic in the city center,” he said. “The situation is calm.”

Should Chavez die or step down, an election would be held within 30 days, probably pitting Maduro against opposition leader and state governor Henrique Capriles for leadership of the country which boasts the world’s biggest oil reserves. The stakes are high for the region, too, given Chavez’s role as the most vocal critic of Washington in Latin America and with the aid he has given leftist governments from Cuba to Bolivia.