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  • 6
    May
    2013
    6:58am, EDT

    Amid 'spy' quarrel, Venezuelan leader calls Obama 'grand chief of devils'

    Tracy family via AP

    A family photo shows Tim Tracy in Venezuela. The 35-year-old California filmmaker was arrested by Venezuelan authorities and accused of spying for the U.S., setting off a diplomatic battle between the countries.

    By Andrew Cawthorne, Reuters

    CARACAS, Venezuela -- Venezuela brushed off criticism from President Barack Obama on Sunday and maintained its accusation that an American detainee in Caracas is a spy pretending to be a filmmaker.

    During his visit to Latin America, Obama said on Saturday the allegations against Tim Tracy, 35, were "ridiculous."

    This came a day after Venezuela's new socialist leader, Nicolas Maduro, labeled Obama "the grand chief of devils."

    Venezuelan Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez Torres insisted that intelligence agents tracking Tracy since late 2012 had uncovered ample evidence he was plotting with militant anti-government factions to destabilize Venezuela with violence.

    Juan Barreto / AFP - Getty Images

    Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro had harsh words for U.S. President Barack Obama over the weekend. Obama says the Maduro government's allegation that a California filmmaker is a spy is "ridiculous." Maduro says Obama is the "grand chief of devils."

    "When you want to do intelligence work in another country, all those big powers who do this type of spying, they often use the facade of a filmmaker, documentary maker, photographer or journalist," he told state TV.

    "Because with that facade, they can go anywhere, penetrate any place."

    Obama's comments about Tracy, and others questioning socialist Maduro's democratic credentials after last month's disputed presidential vote, have infuriated the government and revived accusations of "imperialist meddling."

    Late on Saturday, Maduro's government issued a formal protest note, with Maduro's "devils" remark reminiscent of the tirades his mentor, late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, made against the U.S.

    Maduro, a 50-year-old former bus driver who rose to be Chavez's foreign minister and vice president, has alternately railed against Washington in the same terms as Chavez and fanned prospects of a rapprochement by offering dialogue.

    "I think he actually wants to improve relations with the North, but because he's vulnerable domestically right now, he needs to revive the old blood-and-thunder rhetoric to shore up support," said a Western diplomat in Caracas.

    The Tracy case is a crucial test of Maduro's intentions toward a country that remains the main export market for the OPEC member's oil despite years of political hostility.

    Friends and family of Tracy say he became passionately interested in Venezuelan politics and had excellent relations on both sides.

    "Understandably, we have been living in a nightmare since a week ago last Thursday, when we feel our son/brother Timmy, a filmmaker, was mistakenly detained by Venezuelan authorities while attempting to return to the United States to attend his/our Dad's 80th birthday party," Tracy's family said in a written statement released to Reuters.

    The family said that they had been communication with him and had that he had been treated well.

    "We love and miss our son/ brother very much and want nothing more than to have him home safely as soon as possible," Tracy's family said.

    Related:

    • Parliamentary punch-up in Venezuela
    • 7 die in Venezuela election protests
    • Analysis: Major challenges await leader
    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    348 comments

    Nobody forced him to go to the socialist hellhole called Venezuela.

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, diplomacy, obama, featured, caracas, filmmaker, maduro, tim-tracy, spying-allegation
  • 16
    Apr
    2013
    5:44am, EDT

    Venezuelan rivals rally supporters after clashes over election results

    Christian Veron / Reuters

    Supporters of opposition leader Henrique Capriles face off against riot police as they demonstrate for a recount of the votes in Sunday's election, in Caracas, Venezuela, on April 15, 2013.

    Leo Ramirez / AFP - Getty Images

    Riot police with tear gas face off against opposition supporters in Caracas on April 15, 2013. Venezuela's acting president, Nicolas Maduro, was proclaimed the winner of the country's election on Monday, triggering protests as the opposition demanded a recount.

    By Daniel Wallis and Brian Ellsworth, Reuters

    Both sides in Venezuela's political standoff will hold rival demonstrations on Tuesday after authorities rejected opposition demands for a presidential election recount and protesters clashed with police in Caracas.

    Opposition leader Henrique Capriles says his team's figures show he won the election on Sunday and he wants a full audit of official results that narrowly gave victory to ruling party candidate Nicolas Maduro, the country's acting president.

    The National Electoral Council has refused to hold a recount of the votes, and police fired tear gas and rubber bullets on Monday to disperse opposition supporters who protested in a wealthy district of Caracas. Read the full story.

    Related:

    Major challenges face Venezuela's next leader - whoever he is

    'I am the son of Chavez': Former bus driver rides high in Venezuela election

    Slideshow: Venezuela mourns Hugo Chavez

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    6 comments

    Gee, just move on. Be a good loser Be a gracious winner

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, election, protest, americas, world-news, caracas
  • 12
    Apr
    2013
    7:48am, EDT

    'I am the son of Chavez': Former bus driver rides high in Venezuela election

    Luis Acosta / AFP - Getty Images

    Venezuela's acting president and presidential candidate Nicolas Maduro gestures during his closing campaign rally in Caracas on April 11, 2013 ahead of Sunday's presidential election.

    Raul Arboleda / AFP - Getty Images

    Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles attends a campaign rally in Barquisimeto, Lara state, on April 11, 2013.

    By Daniel Wallis and Todd Benson, Reuters

    The late Hugo Chavez's self-declared socialist revolution will be put to the test at a presidential election on Sunday that pits his chosen successor against a younger rival promising change in the nation he polarized.

    Most opinion polls give his protege, acting President Nicolas Maduro, a strong lead over opposition challenger Henrique Capriles thanks to Chavez's endorsement and the surge of grief and sympathy over his death from cancer last month.

    Ramon Espinosa / AP

    Supporters hold a toddler wearing a Maduro-style mustache at the closing campaign rally for Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on April 11, 2013.

    Raul Arboleda / AFP - Getty Images

    Supporters of Henrique Capriles attend his closing rally in Barquisimeto on April 11, 2013.

    Tomas Bravo / Reuters

    Nicolas Maduro, left, watches former Argentine soccer star Diego Maradona kick a ball during Maduro's closing rally on April 11, 2013.

    The candidates closed out official campaigning on Thursday with dueling rallies, both drawing hundreds of thousands of boisterous supporters. Taking a page out of Chavez's playbook, a fiery Maduro marched through the streets of the capital draped in a Venezuelan flag and called on voters to follow "commander Chavez as the spiritual guide of the fatherland."

    "I am the son of Chavez," the burly 50-year-old former bus driver shouted to supporters in downtown Caracas. "I am ready to be your president."

    Capriles, an energetic 40-year-old state governor, wrapped up his campaign in the nearby city of Barquisimeto. "Those who govern today have never done anything for your security. Sunday we're going to choose between life and death," he roared to the crowd. "If you want a future, you have to vote for change, for a different government." Read the full story.

    Related:

    Maduro sworn in as Venezuela's acting president

    Slideshow: Venezuela mourns Hugo Chavez

    Leo Ramirez / AFP - Getty Images

    Capriles pours water on his head during his final rally on April 11, 2013.

    Enric Marti / AP

    A soldier looks through binoculars at people gathered along Bolivar Avenue for the closing campaign rally for ruling party presidential candidate Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on April 11, 2013.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    25 comments

    Socialism is not communism, and there are many reasons why it is time for us, USA citizens and government, to stop meddling and bullying in the world. That course is cheaper, also.

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  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    7:30pm, EDT

    Venezuela's Hugo Chavez unlikely to be preserved 'for eternity'

    Miraflores Palace / Handout / EPA

    Mourners file past the body of the late Hugo Chavez at the Military Academy in Caracas, Venezuela, on Wednesday, Mar. 13.

    By Mario Naranjo, Reuters

    CARACAS — Venezuela's government said on Wednesday it may not be possible to embalm the remains of late leader Hugo Chavez as planned because the process should have been started earlier.

    Chavez died last week aged 58 after a two-year battle with cancer. His body has been on display in a glass-topped coffin at a grandiose military academy in the capital Caracas, where millions of people have filed past to pay homage.


    The government had said it planned to embalm Chavez's remains "for eternity" in much the same way as was done with the remains of Soviet leaders Lenin and Stalin and communist Chinese leader Mao Zedong after they died.

     

     

     

    "Russian and German scientists have arrived to embalm Chavez and they tell us it's very difficult because the process should have started earlier ... Maybe we can't do it,'' acting President Nicolas Maduro said in televised comments on Wednesday.

    "We are in the middle of the process. It's complicated, it's my duty to inform you."

    Government sources said they expected a formal announcement to be made later this week that, despite the efforts of the team involved, it had not been possible to embalm Chavez.

    World leaders and celebrities paid a last tribute to the flamboyant late Venezuelan leader at his funeral last week. On Friday, his body is due to be transferred from the military academy to a museum on a hilltop overlooking the Miraflores presidential palace.

    Chavez's death has brought an outpouring of emotion in Venezuela, especially among his millions of mostly poor supporters, many of whom viewed him almost as a religious figure even before his death.

    Detractors say the adoration of Chavez is over-the-top and ignores his confrontational style and bullying of opponents.

    They accuse the government of manipulating emotions around his death to help Maduro win an election scheduled for April 14.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez: 1954 - 2013

    Francisco Gomez / Spanish Royal / EPA

    Supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez mourn his death and gather for his funeral.

    Launch slideshow

    179 comments

    Chavez spoke before the United Nations and said "I can still smell sulfer where he stood" (when speaking of OUR President) and that was an insult to the United States and just more sabre ratteling from someone who was just "another dictator" that took advantage of his countries resources to build hi …

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, reuters, hugo-chavez, caracas
  • 11
    Mar
    2013
    7:13pm, EDT

    In retaliation, US expels two Venezuelan diplomats

    By Catherine Chomiak, Producer, NBC News

    In direct response to Venezuela's expulsion of two U.S. military attaches from Caracas last week, the United States has expelled two Venezuelan diplomats.

    The U.S. State Department informed Venezuela on Saturday that one of their officials in Washington and one in New York had been declared personae non gratae. The officials, Orlando Jose Montanez Olivares and Victor Camacaro Mata, have since departed the United States.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Despite leaving the door open for better relations with Venezuela, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland defended the U.S. actions.

    "Around the world, when our people are thrown out unjustly, we're going to take reciprocal action," Nuland said at a daily press briefing. "And we need to do that to protect our own people."

    Venezuela’s president of 14 years, Hugo Chavez, died last week, leaving the future of relations with the United States up in the air.

    Chavez was a harsh critic of the United States, and used fiery anti-American rhetoric as a rallying cry.  

    And just hours before announcing on Tuesday that Chavez had died, Vice President Nicolas Maduro announced the expulsion of the two U.S. diplomats, and accused the United States of being responsible for the cancer that took Chavez’s life.

    Maduro, the late president’s hand-picked successor, on Monday registered to be a candidate in the April 14 vote to replace Chavez. He used the event to stage a campaign rally, surrounded by thousands of cheering, crying, music-playing supporters with him.

    "We do hope for better relations with Venezuela. There is work that we would like to do together, particularly in the areas of counterterrorism, counter-narcotics, economic and energy relations. But it's going to take a change of tone from Caracas," Nuland said.

    In the short time since Chavez's death, the tone has remained unchanged, according to Nuland, who said that "in the day or days that followed, there was some pretty heated rhetoric coming in our direction. I think I called it at one point... a page from the old Chavista playbook that we were hoping was going to change."

    One expelled official, Montanez, was second secretary at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington, D.C. and the other, Camacaro, was Second Consul in at Consulate General of Venezuela in New York.

    NBC News staff writer Kari Huus contributed to this report.

    16 comments

    I sure Unlce Sam longs for the days when he told Central and South America what to do or else. I believe someone needs to tell him that those days are over.

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, hugo-chavez, caracas, madura
  • 7
    Mar
    2013
    8:33am, EST

    'We'll carry on your fight': Venezuelans mourn and prepare for Hugo Chavez funeral

    Tens of thousands of people wept openly in the streets of Caracas over the death of their "Commandante," President Hugo Chavez, while exiled Venezuelans in the U.S. cheered after learning of the socialist leader died.

    By Mary Murray, Producer, NBC News

    CARACAS — Condolences flooded in from all over the globe and more than 100 countries will be sending emissaries to Friday's funeral for Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, who succumbed to cancer on Tuesday after a 20-month battle.

    Even Washington will be represented, despite the contentious relations between the two governments. Just hours before the 58-year old president died, Caracas expelled two American military officials attached to the U.S. mission for allegedly committing acts to "destabilize" the Chavez government.


    Friday's funeral and burial will be more formal than Wednesday's procession of his casket through the streets of Caracas.

    For ten hours, an estimated one million Venezuelans followed the coffin for miles as it traveled from the military hospital where Chavez died to the Military Academy, where he studied to become a paratrooper.

    Grief-stricken followers lined the streets as the coffin of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez was carried from the hospital to the military academy where he will like in state until his funeral on Friday. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    It was a parade of emotions, with men and women of all ages weeping openly. As the caravan moved slowly through the streets, mourners tossed flowers, flags and red caps with Chavez slogans on the casket until it was completely covered in a mound of mementos.  Chavez's immediate family rode in the funeral procession.

    Overnight, thousands have stood in line to pay their last respects, many wearing the bright blue, red and yellow colors of the country's national flag. As mourners filed past the coffin, there were scenes of genuine sadness and dismay. Some people prayed while others saluted his remains. His supporters are devastated but also promising to keep his revolution alive.

    "Comandante — rest in peace. We'll carry on your fight," said Cesar Trompiz, a university student who appreciated what he called Chavez's "powerful connection" to the country's poor. "He was one of us. He looked like us. He spoke like us," Trompiz added.

    'Without you, we're nothing'
    Guillermo Hernan and members of his family traveled from Chavez's hometown in northwest Venezuela to pay their respects. He helped his elderly mother walk past the casket as she wailed, "Without you, we're nothing." Hernan said that Chavez taught him to love his country.

    "We were orphans before Chavez. We had no father and we had no motherland. Chavez became our father and gave us the right to our homeland," said Hernan. In his 20s, he said the government's policies have helped his family with housing and education.

    While the depth of the grief for millions here cannot be understimated, Chavez was also a polarizing figure for millions of other Venezuelans vehemently opposed to his leftist policies and close political allegiances with countries like Cuba and China. The two sides are known to clash verbally and some observers had feared that Chavez's death would spark civil unrest. But since Tuesday's announcement, the opposition has toned down its political rhetoric — urging the president's enemies to be respectful of Chavez's grieving family during this difficult time.

    However, many expect politics as usual to crank up as soon as the nation's seven-day official mourning period ends.

    Under the Constitution, a national vote must be called within 30 days of the office being vacated and, from then, the election must take place 30 days later. Although no specific date has been announced, one source reports that Venezuelans may be going to the polls to decide on Chavez's replacement during the second weekend in April.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez: 1954 - 2013

    Ricardo Mazalan / AP

    Slideshow: Supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez across the Americas mourn his death.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    Hugo Chavez's last words: 'Please don't let me die,' general says

    Socialist socialites: Hollywood mourns Hugo Chavez

    A view from Tehran's street: Hugo Chavez a friend

    Full coverage of Hugo Chavez's death from NBC News

    44 comments

    They should finish the "our father" crap with "who art in hell".

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  • 7
    Mar
    2013
    6:14am, EST

    Hugo Chavez's last words: 'Please don't let me die,' general says

    Tens of thousands of people wept openly in the streets of Caracas over the death of their "Commandante," President Hugo Chavez, while exiled Venezuelans in the U.S. cheered after learning of the socialist leader died.

    By Fabiola Sanchez, The Associated Press

    CARACAS, Venezuela - President Hugo Chavez died of a massive heart attack and inaudibly mouthed his desire to live, the head of Venezuela's presidential guard said late Wednesday.

    "He couldn't speak but he said it with his lips ... 'I don't want to die. Please don't let me die,' because he loved his country, he sacrificed himself for his country," Gen. Jose Ornella told The Associated Press.

    The general said he spent the last two years with Chavez, including his final moments, as Venezuela's president of 14 years battled an unspecified cancer in the pelvic region.

    Ornella spoke to the AP outside the military academy where Chavez's body lay in state. He said Chavez's cancer was very advanced when death came but gave no details.

    Ornella did not respond when asked if the cancer had spread to Chavez's lungs.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez: 1954 - 2013

    Ricardo Mazalan / AP

    Supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez across the Americas mourn his death.

    Launch slideshow

    The government announced on the eve of Chavez's death that he had suffered a severe new respiratory infection. It was the second such infection reported by officials after Chavez underwent his fourth cancer surgery in Cuba on Dec. 11.

    Venezuelan authorities have not said what kind of cancer Chavez had or specified exactly where tumors were removed.

    During the first lung infection, near the end of December, doctors implanted a tracheal tube to ease Chavez's breathing, but breathing insufficiency persisted and worsened, the government said.

    'He suffered a lot'
    Ornella said that Chavez had "the best" doctors from all over the world but that they never discussed the president's condition in front of him.

    The general said he didn't know precisely what kind of cancer afflicted Chavez, but added: "He suffered a lot."

    He said that Chavez knew when he spoke to Venezuelans on Dec. 8, three days before his final surgery in Cuba, that "there was very little hope he would make it out of that operation."

    It was Chavez's fourth cancer surgery and previous interventions had been followed by chemotherapy and radiation.

    Ornella echoed the concern of Vice President Nicolas Maduro that some sort of foul play was involved in Chavez's cancer.

    Venezuelan government via EPA, file

    The last pictures of Hugo Chavez made publicly available were taken on Feb. 14.

    "I think it will be 50 years before they declassify a document (that) I think (will show) the hand of the enemy is involved," he said.

    The general didn't identify who he was talking about, but Maduro suggested possible U.S. involvement on Tuesday. The U.S. State Department called the allegation absurd.

    Maduro, Chavez's self-anointed successor, said Chavez died Tuesday afternoon in a Caracas military hospital.

    The government said Chavez, 58, had been there since returning from Cuba on Feb. 18.

    Related:

    Socialist socialites: Hollywood mourns Hugo Chavez

    A view from Tehran's street: Hugo Chavez a friend

    Full coverage of Hugo Chavez's death from NBC News

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    629 comments

    We all die. No use being afraid of that. Be afraid of not living.

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  • Updated
    7
    Mar
    2013
    4:31pm, EST

    Crowds of Venezuelans turn out to honor Chavez as coffin is transported

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez: 1954 - 2013

    Ricardo Mazalan / AP

    The flag-draped coffin containing the body of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez is taken from the hospital where he died, to a military academy, where it will remain until his funeral in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday.

    Launch slideshow

    By Ian Johnston, F. Brinley Bruton and Becky Bratu, NBC News

    After a seven hour procession through the streets thronged with mourners, the body of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez arrived Wednesday afternoon at the Military Academy where it was to lay in state.

    Tens of thousands of Venezuelans followed Chavez's coffin, draped in Venezuela's blue, red and yellow flag, as it was moved through the capital city of Caracas, from the hospital where the charismatic leftist leader died to its destination, about two miles away.


    A Venezuelan government source estimated that some 8,000 people were gathered outside the Military Hospital where he died, waiting for Chavez's private guards to begin the procession.

    Television pictures showed much larger crowds in the city's main streets.

    Chavez, 58, the socialist leader who ran Venezuela for 14 years, lost his two-year battle with cancer Tuesday.

    One of the country’s top military leaders and a key Chavez supporter, Maj. Gen. Wilmer Barrientos, said on local television (link in Spanish) that the procession would allow Venezuelans to pay their respects.

    "That way we will offer him the honor of a head of state accompanied by the people, the people who love him so much, who venerated him, who continue to venerate him," he said.

    A mass attended by the country’s political and military elite would be held at the Military Academy, Barrientos added.

    A public funeral is scheduled for Chavez on Friday, followed by seven days of mourning.

    "It's a moment of deep pain," Vice President Nicolas Maduro said Tuesday, as he announced Chavez's passing and urged the nation not to resort to expressions of violence.

    'I adore him'
    The deceased leader's daughter, María Gabriela Chavez, tweeted to her followers: "I don't have words. Eternally, THANK YOU! Strength! We must follow his example. We must continue building our NATION! Always daddy of mine!"

    Venezuelans — some in tears, some chanting "Long live Chavez!" — also gathered near the Miraflores presidential palace Tuesday, The Associated Press reported.

    "I feel such big pain I can't even speak," Yamilina Barrios, a 39-year-old office worker, told the AP. "He was the best thing the country had ... I adore him. Let's hope the country calms down and we can continue the tasks he left us."

    One of the world's most flamboyant leaders lost his two-year battle with cancer on Tuesday, ending 14 years of a tumultuous and often bitterly divisive socialist reign. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    "He was our father. 'Chavismo' will not end. We are his people. We will continue to fight!" Nancy Jotiya, 56, in Caracas' downtown Bolivar Square, told Reuters.

    Reuters reported isolated violent incidents, including the burning of tents used by students who had been protesting against secrecy surrounding Chavez's condition.

    The oil-financed social policies implemented throughout his rule earned Chavez the support of the poor but also disapproval from Venezuela's business community and the wealthy. "At last!" shouted some women in an upscale neighborhood, according to Reuters.

    Condolences also poured in from around the world.

    Among those who made public remarks was Henrique Capriles Radonski, who faced Chavez in the nation's elections last October.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez dies: The world reacts

    Carlos Garcia Rawlins / Reuters

    Supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez across the Americas mourn his death.

    Launch slideshow

    "We hurt for the feelings of pain of the deceased president's family, and of his colleagues and many Venezuelans, our most heartfelt condolences," Capriles said. "This is not a moment to highlight what separates us. In hours of anguish, families and a people, who are a great family, must unite in prayer, in mediation. Not time of difference, time of union."

    Capriles lost to Chavez in October, but the latter was not sworn in due to his illness.

    NBC News' Edgar Zuniga and Mary Murray, and The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Venezuela's 'Comandante' Hugo Chavez dies

     World leaders mourn Chavez as wave of grief washes over Latin America

    Love him or hate him, 'El Comandante' hard to replace

     

    This story was originally published on Wed Mar 6, 2013 10:50 AM EST

    499 comments

    Those are tears of joy!

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, world, funeral, americas, hugo-chavez, featured, caracas, updated
  • 5
    Mar
    2013
    5:06pm, EST

    Analysis: Chavistas begin search for Latin America's next 'Comandante'

    One of the world's most flamboyant leaders lost his two-year battle with cancer on Tuesday, ending 14 years of a tumultuous and often bitterly divisive socialist reign. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By Carlos Rajo, Commentator, Telemundo

    News analysis

    Love him or hate him — and plenty of people in Venezuela and around the world felt one of the two emotions — firebrand President Hugo Chavez’s brand of leadership will be hard to replace.

    Chavez died Tuesday at age 58, after a long battle with cancer that was shrouded in mystery and prevented him from being inaugurated for a fourth term.


    Beyond the country’s borders, question marks loom as to whether any regional leader will step into Chavez’s shoes and become the region’s voice of socialism and anti-Americanism.

    Chavez, a self-declared socialist, often criticized the United States on its history of intervention in the Americas and Washington's stance on countries such as Iran.

    In a 2006 address at the U.N. General Assembly, Chavez called President George W. Bush "the devil."

    In response to news of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez's death, the U.S. released a statement saying, in part, that the U.S. "remains committed to policies that promote democratic principles, the rule of law, and respect for human rights." For two years, the U.S. has not had an ambassador in Venezuela, the largest exporter of oil in the hemisphere. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    "The hegemonistic pretensions of the American empire are placing at risk the very existence of the human species," he said during the speech.

    Such declarations gave voice to many wishing to shake-off perceived American dominance of Latin America.  His habit of using Venezuela’s vast oil wealth to help prop-up governments in the name of the "Bolivarian Revolution" — named after Simon Bolivar who led 19th-century movements to end Spain’s colonial rule throughout Latin America — won him many friends.

    He also supported cooperation among Latin American nations, and helped establish the Union of South American Nations, the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas and the Bank of the South.

    Nobody in power in the Americas has Chavez’s charisma or power to galvanize millions. More importantly, no other leader — even the ones that share his ideas like Ecuador’s Rafael Correa, Bolivia’s Evo Morales or Argentina’s Cristina Kirchner — has the resources and influence of a country such as Venezuela, which has the largest proven oil reserves in the world.

    NBC's Mark Potter discusses the impact of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez's death on the country and on the relationship between Venezuela and the United States.

    So while many Chavistas are saying "Long live to the King," it is not clear how long the king’s project will survive internationally. The same is the case within Venezuela, but more so.

    According to Venezuela’s constitution, an election will need to be called within 30 days of Chavez’s death. Who the Chavistas choose to succeed "El Comandante" will help determine the future of the Bolivarian Revolution.

    If Chavez’ will carries beyond the grave, Vice President Nicolas Maduro will be the candidate in the upcoming election. It isn’t only that the 50-year-old former Caracas bus driver and union organizer was appointed by Chavez as his successor, but also that he represents the closest thing to 'Chavismo' without Chavez. 

    Preferred candidate
    Maduro lacks Chavez’s charisma and popular appeal. At the same time, Maduro accepts all the tenants of Bolivarian socialism – a mix of authoritarianism, state owned enterprises and anti-U.S. rhetoric functioning under some form of democratic governance.

    It is no coincidence that Maduro is the preferred candidate of Cuba, Chavez’s closest ally and supporter.

    Maduro’s main opposition within his sphere is Diosdado Cabello, a former military officer and currently the President of the National Assembly. Cabello is as wooden publicly as Maduro, but he has the support of another major player in Venezuelan politics and Chavismo itself — the army.

    Leo Ramirez / AFP - Getty Images

    Hugo Chavez, seen here in 2011 standing next to his daughter Rosa Virginia, right, Minister of Penitentiary Services Maria Iris Varela, left, and Venezuelan Minister of Health Eugenia Sader.

    The men in uniform may decide that it is time for a change of regime and not just a change in leader.  Under their influence, there could be a rapprochement with the business sector and thawing in relations with United States. 

    Nevertheless, whoever ends up being the Chavistas’ candidate, and assuming he wins the election, the project may still be in danger: Venezuela is still dogged by inflation rates of between 5 and 30 percent a year, a large government deficit, alarming rates of urban violence, shortages in many goods and services, such as electricity, milk, meat and toilet paper. 

    So even if the military accepts a Maduro presidency, it isn’t a given that they will support civilian leader to whom they see as too leftist and too close to the Cubans indefinitely. It is also possible that there will be infighting among the Chavistas’ civilian groups, both the politicians who are in charge of the state machinery and the "boligarchs," the moguls who have profited immensely with Chavez in power. 

    The reaction of the Chavista popular bases is another potential problem. El Comandante won’t be there to convince them to wait for better times, to accept the shortages, inflation, insecurity and other realities of a dysfunctional and inefficient government.

    But equally important, these sectors could become a threat to Chavez’s successor as many are more radical than their leaders...and some are armed.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez dies: The world reacts

    Claudio Santana / AFP - Getty Images

    Supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in the United States and elsewhere mourn his death.

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    Telemundo is NBC News' Spanish-language partner.

    Related:

    Venezuela's 'Comandante' Hugo Chavez dies

    World leaders pay tribute to Hugo Chavez

    Full Venezuela coverage from NBC News

     

     

     

     

     

    128 comments

    Chavez was a great leader who did much good for his people. He opposed the corrupt US supported oligarchs and helped the down trodden.

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  • 5
    Mar
    2013
    5:00pm, EST

    Venezuela's 'Comandante' Hugo Chavez dies

    One of the world's most flamboyant leaders lost his two-year battle with cancer on Tuesday, ending 14 years of a tumultuous and often bitterly divisive socialist reign. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, the charismatic leftist who dominated his country with sweeping political change and flamboyant speeches, died Tuesday at age 58, after a long battle with cancer that was shrouded in mystery and prevented him from being inaugurated for a fourth term.

    Adored or reviled for his self-styled populist revolution, Chavez held sway over Venezuela through a cult of personality, government reforms that championed the downtrodden, and an endless stream of rhetoric denouncing capitalism, imperialism and the United States.


    The "Chavistas" praised El Comandante for reducing extreme poverty and expanding access to health care and education. Critics blamed him for high inflation, food shortages, escalating crime and mismanagement of the country’s oil industry.

    Human rights groups lambasted him for politicizing the judicial branch, and undermining the democratic system of checks and balances.

    In response to news of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez's death, the U.S. released a statement saying, in part, that the U.S. "remains committed to policies that promote democratic principles, the rule of law, and respect for human rights." For two years, the U.S. has not had an ambassador in Venezuela, the largest exporter of oil in the hemisphere. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    To many he was a charming populist who sang and danced on his weekly television show and gave the impoverished a voice; others saw him as an autocrat who plastered his portrait all over the country and failed to deliver on the promises of what he called the "Bolivarian revolution."

    "He will be remembered as someone who generated over 14 years an international presence and impact way beyond his country's size or wealth and beyond his own talent and personal charisma," said Jorge Castenada, the former Mexico foreign minister and NBC's Latin American policy analyst.

    "And I think he'll be remembered for having tried to make a life of poor people in Venezuela better but in the end of the day, having made it worse. When the consequences of his economic policies become apparent, it will end up that he spent an enormous amount of money to make people a little better off for a short period of time."

    The last two years of his presidency were overshadowed by his health struggles. After declaring himself free of an unspecified cancer, he fended off a tough challenge to win re-election in 2012 — even giving an epic nine-hour speech during the campaign.

    He soon relapsed and was rushed to Cuba for surgery. He was deemed too sick to be sworn into office in early January, and was still gravely ill when he made a surprise return to Venezuela in mid-February, heralded on a Twitter account with 4 million followers.

    His deputies insisted he was still in control, signing documents and holding meetings in a Caracas hospital room even if a tube in his throat had silenced his well-known voice. But by this week, the end seemed imminent with reports of a new respiratory infection.

    In an address to the nation Tuesday afternoon, Vice President Nicholas Maduro said Chavez was facing his "most difficult hours" and claimed the cancer was an "attack" by his enemies. A few hours later, he announced Chavez's death at 4:25 p.m.

    "Honor and glory to Hugo Chavez," an emotional Maduro said in Spanish on Venezuelan television, calling for public memorials at every town square in the country but warning against violence or hatred.

    Born July 28, 1954, to schoolteachers in a small Venezuelan village, Chavez was raised by his grandmother and entered the military academy in Caracas at age 17. Six years later, inspired by the life of 19th century South American revolutionary Simon Bolivar, he formed a secret movement within the army.

    Rising through the military to the rank of captain, he led a bloody coup attempt in 1992 that failed and landed him in prison. Pardoned two years later, the ex-paratrooper re-launched his revolt against the ruling class and announced his candidacy for president in 1998.

    "The resurrection of Venezuela has begun, and nothing and no one can stop it,'' he bellowed to a roaring crowd after a landslide victory made him the youngest president in the history of Venezuela.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez through the years

    /

    The life of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez from his rise as a lieutenant colonel after his failed coup attempt in 1992.

    Launch slideshow

    As president, Chavez created a new constitution and had the name of the country changed to the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. He took greater control of the state-run oil company, expanded the country’s armed forces, and instituted government programs to create jobs, housing and services for the poor.

    A 2009 report by the progressive think tank Center for Economic and Policy Research found poverty was cut in half during the first decade of Chavez’s rule; child mortality fell by a third; malnutrition deaths were down by 50 percent; and college enrollment almost doubled.

    At the same time, one non-government report estimated Venezuela’s murder rate quadrupled while Chavez was in power. In 2012, inflation hit 18%. Accusations of corruption and nepotism dogged his administration.

    Problems aside, he enjoyed tremendous loyalty from his supporters. A 2002 coup during an economic crisis kept him out of power for just two days — and he claimed the United States had orchestrated it.

    Chavez’s relations with the U.S. — referred to derisively as the "empire" in his epic speeches — were icy. He called President George W. Bush "the devil" and "the king of vacations." In 2010, he demanded Secretary of State Hillary Clinton resign "along with those other delinquents working in the State Department."

    He often lavished praise on Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi and Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmedinejad, but his staunchest ally was Cuba. He kept the island nation flush with oil in exchange for its well-trained doctors and teachers, and he was visiting Havana when he fell ill in June 2011.

    In an address to the nation a few weeks later, he admitted neglecting his health and said it was Fidel Castro who got him to admit he wasn’t feeling well, leading to the discovery of a tumor in his pelvis and emergency surgery.

    In the following months, the twice-divorced Catholic shuttled between Cuba and Caracas for treatment even as he sought a fourth term, made possible because he had pushed through the abolition of term limits in the constitution he had rewritten.

    Days before the election he would win with 54 percent of the vote to his opponent’s 45 percent, he spoke to a rally of supporters in Caracas, displaying the trademark swagger that had made him one of Latin America’s most captivating, if polarizing, leaders.

    "Since I haven’t failed you in these 14 years," he said, according to the Associated Press. "I promise I won’t fail you in the next presidential term.

    "Because Chavez doesn’t lie. Because Chavez doesn’t sell out. Because Chavez is the people. Because Chavez is truth. Because all of you are Chavez. We all are."

    Related: 

    World leaders pay tribute to Chavez

    Analysis: Chavistas begin search for Latin America's next 'Comandante'

    Full Venezuela coverage from NBC News

    1598 comments

    condolences to chavez's family......from a geopolitical stand point Good Riddance........one less buddy of obama's to worry about.....

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  • 3
    Jan
    2013
    10:14pm, EST

    Chavez still has 'severe' respiratory problem

    The opposition in Venezuela is demanding that the government come clean on the true state of Hugo Chavez's health. He's due to be sworn in again as President within the next week. However, he hasn't been seen in public since flying to Cuba for medical treatment last month. ITN's Jonathan Rugman reports.

    By Reuters

    CARACAS - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is still suffering a "severe" respiratory infection that has hindered his breathing as he struggles to recover from cancer surgery in Cuba, the government said on Thursday.

    The 58-year-old socialist leader has not been seen in public nor heard from in more than three weeks. Officials say he is in delicate condition after his fourth operation in just 18 months for an undisclosed form of cancer in his pelvic area.

    "Comandante Chavez has faced complications as a result of a severe lung infection," Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said in the latest official update on the president's condition.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld


    "This infection has caused a breathing insufficiency that requires Comandante Chavez to comply strictly with medical treatment," the communique added, giving no further details.

    Vice President Nicolas Maduro had earlier returned to Venezuela on Thursday after visiting Chavez in hospital as rumors swirled that the president could be close to death.

    Flanked by senior government figures including Diosdado Cabello, the head of the National Assembly, Maduro toured a coffee production plant in Caracas - the type of visit that the president made frequently before he fell ill.

    AP file

    In this photo provided by Miraflores Presidential Press Office, Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez speaks during a cabinet meeting at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Nov. 8, 2012.

    "He is conscious of the battle that he's in, and has the same fighting spirit as always, with the same strength and energy as always, with his confidence and security," Maduro said. "We're going to be alongside him with the same strength and the same energy."

    Maduro said Cabello, Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez and Chavez's elder brother Adan, among others, had all been with the president in the Havana hospital.

    Venezuela opposition demands update on ailing Chavez

    Venezuelan bonds rallied to five-year highs earlier on Thursday on rumors that Chavez's health had taken a turn for the worse. Foreign investors generally hope for a more business-friendly government in Venezuela, and its assets have rallied in recent months on news of his illness.

    In scenes that recalled Chavez's hours-long televised visits to building sites, hospitals and oil refineries, Maduro told workers at the nationalized Fama de America factory that there was no "transition" taking place in the country.

    "The only transition in Venezuela is the transition to socialism," he said in comments carried live by state television.

    Pictures: Hugo Chavez through the years

    "It began six years ago, ordered by Comandante Hugo Chavez as chief and president, elected, re-elected and ratified, much as it pains the bourgeois hucksters and the right, who have done so much damage to our fatherland."

    Chavez's abrupt exit from the political scene would be a huge shock for the South American OPEC nation. His oil-financed socialism has made him a hero to the poor majority but critics call him a dictator.

    His condition is being watched closely by Latin American allies that have benefited from his help, as well as investors attracted by Venezuela's lucrative and widely traded debt.

    Presidencia / AFP - Getty Images

    This handout image released by the Venezuelan Presidency shows Communications Minister Ernesto Villegas reading a statement on the health of President Hugo Chavez in Caracas, Thursday.

    'Make no mistake'
    Chavez is still set to be sworn in on January 10, as spelled out in the constitution. If he were to die or had to step aside, new elections would be held within 30 days, with Maduro running as the ruling Socialist Party (PSUV) candidate.

    While the constitution gives January 10 as the start of a new presidential term, it does not explicitly state what happens if a president-elect cannot take office on that date.

    Top PSUV officials have suggested that Chavez's inauguration could be postponed - while the opposition says any delay would be just the latest sign the former soldier is not fit to govern.

    Cabello said the "Chavismo" movement was in pain but remained resolute, and he issued a warning to the opposition: "Make no mistake about these people or this revolution. It is going to cost you very, but very, dearly," he said.

    On Saturday, Cabello will likely be re-elected as head of the Chavista-dominated National Assembly, a key post that could see him assume Chavez's role temporarily while new elections are called should the president have to step down.

    Relative says Venezuela's Chavez 'stable'

    In the past Cabello has been considered as a rival of Maduro, but the pair have been at pains to deny that. Their appearance side-by-side at the coffee factory on Thursday looked to be the latest effort to project a unified front.

    Last year, Chavez staged what appeared to be remarkable comeback from the disease to win re-election to a new six-year term in October despite being weakened by radiation therapy. But he returned to Cuba for more treatment within weeks of his win.

    Venezuela's controversial president Hugo Chavez — who makes no secret of his dislike for the US — was re-elected to an unprecedented third term, fending off a serious challenge to win decisively, 54 to 45 percent. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports from Caracas.

    Officials have said he suffered unexpected bleeding and then a respiratory infection after a six-hour operation on December 11. That respiratory infection caused further complications, they have said, without giving more details.

    The head of the opposition's Democratic Unity coalition, Ramon Aveledo, has accused the authorities of breaking a pledge to keep Venezuelans informed about Chavez's health.

    And one opposition leader suggested on Thursday that legislators should form an official commission to visit Cuba and assess the president's condition for themselves.

    Maduro hit back in his televised comments, saying the public had been provided with updates almost every day, and he accused Aveledo of orchestrating a campaign of misinformation.

    "We have no doubt Mr. Aveledo is behind the campaign of sick rumors that began on Twitter and Facebook," Maduro said.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    59 comments

    yea, its called life support ! somebody kick out the plug !

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  • 7
    Dec
    2012
    11:24am, EST

    'So, where's the party?' Chavez asks in theatrical return from Cuba treatment

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez arrives at Simon Bolivar airport in Caracas on Friday following medical treatment in Cuba.

    By Reuters

    CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez made a theatrical return home Friday after medical treatment in Cuba, walking and joking in a first public appearance for three weeks that quashed rumors he may have been at death's door.

    "So, where's the party?" an ebullient and robust-looking Chavez said after flying in before dawn to the surprise and delight of supporters.

    "I'm happy and enthused to be back again," he told beaming ministers after walking unaided down the steps from his plane at the international airport outside Caracas.


     

    The 58-year-old socialist leader has had three cancer operations in Cuba since mid-2011 and returned to Havana 10 days ago to receive "hyperbaric oxygenation" -- a treatment normally used to alleviate bone decay from radiation therapy.

    Speculation had been rife that he may have suffered a recurrence of the disease, and one local journalist had said he was confined to a wheelchair.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Earlier this year, Chavez declared himself "completely cured" and went on to win re-election comfortably in October.

    Amid a barrage of rumors fed by the opposition, officials had maintained that his latest visit to Cuba was just a scheduled follow-up to the radiation therapy he underwent in the first half of 2012.

    Supporters celebrated the return of a man who has dominated the South American country since he first won election in 1998. He wore a blue and white tracksuit and flew with relatives and aides, including Vice President Nicolas Maduro.

    Venezuela's Hugo Chavez wins 3rd term, vows to deepen socialist revolution

    "YEEESSSS!!!!," tweeted Eva Golinger, an American-Venezuelan lawyer close to the Chavez government.

    "Chavez is back and has shown up all the rumor-mongers, necrophiliacs, gossips and ill-thinkers ... Welcome comandante," she wrote (in Spanish).

    Chavez looked relatively well, moving with ease and chatting for 15 minutes on the runway, although he remains puffy-faced as he has been since the radiation treatment.

    NBC's Kerry Sanders answers questions about Chavez re-election

    Questions linger
    Chavez's return gives him a week to campaign for Venezuela's Dec. 16 state elections, where his ruling Socialist Party hopes to use the momentum of the presidential victory to win back some opposition-held governorships.

    The opposition, however, is hoping that discontent with grassroots issues like crime, power-cuts and cronyism will enable it to at least hold the seven states it controls out of Venezuela's 23.

    Speculation over Chavez's health is unlikely to end, given the scant details given by the government.

    Doctors say hyperbaric oxygenation is a treatment normally given in different sessions over several months, meaning he could return to Cuba again soon.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    They also say nobody can declare themselves cured of cancer until a couple of years have passed without recurrence.

    In Venezuela, Hugo Chavez won another 6-year term as president of the oil-rich nation with official results showing the socialist leader garnering 54 percent of the vote. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports.

    Opponents criticize Chavez for secrecy over his health and preferring Cuban doctors to Venezuelans.

    "His whole absence has been a black hole of misinformation," opposition legislator Tomas Guanipa told local media.

    More Venezuela coverage from NBC News

    Chavez has chosen to be treated in Havana due to his friendship with Cuba's past and present leaders Fidel and Raul Castro, plus the discretion he is guaranteed thanks to the Communist government's strict controls on information.

    Cuba's Communist Party newspaper published photos showing Raul Castro bidding farewell to Chavez at Havana airport. Chavez said he had met Fidel Castro during his stay. 

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    10 comments

    The party will begin when he is dead. Then the world will have one less a-hole to contend with. He is a legend....in his own mind!!

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, cuba, hugo-chavez, featured, caracas, socialism
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