http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/1779/20/Chavez-lives-on.aspx

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07-03-2013 02:24PM ET

Chavez lives on

Gamal Nkrumah pays tribute to the late Veneuzelan leader Hugo Chavez, a 
champion of the disadvantaged and disfranchised in Latin America and globally 
and a champion of Latin American unification

 

Venenzuelan President Hugo Chavez, a devotee of South America's legendary 
liberator, Simón Bolívar, died aged 58 after a long battle against cancer. 
Chavez underwent several rounds of chemotherapy, and succumbed to the disease 
Tuesday afternoon. "We have just received the most tragic and awful 
information. At 4.25pm, President Hugo Chávez Frias died," Vice President 
Nicolás Maduro – tipped as a likely successor – announced in a televised 
address, his voice choking.

"It's a moment of deep pain," he said. Latin America, a continent that has 
embraced Western-style democracy and yet has consistently elected leftist 
leaders mourned the passing of Chavez. Bolivia announced seven days of 
mourning. The presidents of Brazil and Argentina cancelled a summit. In 
Colombia Chávez was hailed as the decisive figure in that country's ongoing 
peace process. And, in Ecuador Chavez was regarded as a revolutionary 
figurehead. In Chile Chavez was hailed as a key figure in regional intergration.

A public mourning began on Tuesday night after the announcement of the passing 
of Chávez, who 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."

The progressive forces of the world were shocked to learn that Cuban surgeons 
had removed a baseball-sized tumour from the pelvis of Chavez. Venezuelans 
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." The mourning of 
Chavez was an unprecedented show of solidarity with the late Venezuelan leader.

As messages of condolence came from many world leaders, perhaps the most 
significant was from United States President 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. Chávez's doctrine of 
"Bolivarian 21st-century socialism" galvanised the people of South and Cnetral 
America and the Caribbean. Venezuela controls the world's greatest untapped 
reserves of oil.

Chavez was regarded as a champion of the disadvantaged and the impoverished and 
disfranshised not only of Venzuela, but of the entire "Third World".

His designated successor, Maduro, is likely to face right-wing presidential 
hopeful 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. A failed coup in 
1992 propelled Chavez into the limelight but it was his ballot box triumphs 
that made him an inspiration for Venezuela's, and the entire world's poor.


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