<http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2012/12/20121292481189651.html>
Chavez cancer surgery in Cuba 'successful'
Vice president says the Venezuelan leader's fourth cancer operation
was "complicated" but a complete success.
Last Modified: 12 Dec 2012
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's fourth round of cancer surgery was
complicated but successful and the leader was recovering in his Cuban
hospital room, the country's vice president says.
"We want to thank all the love, the pure love ... for this operation
ended correctly and successfully," Nicolas Maduro, who was recently
designated by Chavez as his successor in case he becomes
incapacitated, said in an address to the nation on Tuesday.
Maduro said the surgery had lasted more than six hours, adding that
"Commander Chavez was back in his room" and would shortly begin a
"post-operative phase" that would last several days.
Al Jazeera's Teresa Bo, reporting from the capital, Caracas, said
that after addressing the nation Maduro attended a mass held for
Chavez in the city.
"We saw thousands of people praying for the president," she said. "We
saw people crying, we saw people carrying crosses and pictures of him
and chanting, 'Long live Chavez.'"
"There is a vigil ongoing in one of Caracas's main squares. People
say they are going to stay there until
they hear further news about the president's health."
Chavez announced on Saturday that he needed to undergo a fourth
cancer-related surgery after tests showed that "some malignant cells"
had reappeared in the same area in his pelvic region where tumours
were previously removed.
Neither the Venezuelan leader nor his Cuban doctors have ever
disclosed what kind of cancer he has.
Chavez, 58, acknowledged that his Cuban medical team had conveyed to
him a sense of urgency about the operation, which he said was now
"absolutely necessary".
Heir apparent
Chavez also said that in the event that "something happens" to
him, Maduro would step in and assume control of the government for
the rest of the 2013-2019 term, as required by the constitution.
The president also indicated he would like Maduro to take over the
reins of power in a post-Chavez period, urging Venezuelans to vote
for him in the next presidential elections.
Maduro, who has been serving as Venezuela's foreign minister for the
past six years, was appointed vice president in the wake of the
October presidential elections. He has held both portfolios since.
Maduro broke into tears at a political rally hours after Chavez flew to Havana.
"Chavez has a nation, he has all of us, and he'll have all of us
forever in this battle," he told supporters. "Even beyond this life,
we're going to be loyal to Hugo Chavez."
Speaking to Al Jazeera from London, Colin Harding, head of the Latin
Form, a political consultancy focusing on Latin America, said Chavez
is hoping Maduro will be able to continue his "Bolivarian revolution".
"Maduro is Chavez's closest confidante but he is not anything like
Chavez, in the sense that Chavez is a highly charismatic and
extremely crowd-pleasing figure," Harding said.
"Maduro has a rather brooding presence. He was an experienced union
leader in the 90s - before that he was a bus driver in Caracas."
_______________________________________________
Sustainablelorgbiofuel mailing list
Sustainablelorgbiofuel@lists.sustainablelists.org
http://lists.eruditium.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sustainablelorgbiofuel