Images of Hugo Chavez shown to quell health rumors
As rumors about Chavez’s disappearance from public view since the June 10 operation reached a crescendo, both governments put out video and photographs of him walking and chatting with revolutionary leader Fidel Castro.
"He’s fine, you see?" said Eva Golinger, an American-Venezuelan lawyer who is close to Chavez and a vociferous fan.
The images shown on Tuesday night do not disprove the most extreme rumor -- that Chavez has prostate cancer -- but they give weight to the official line that he is simply recovering from a painful operation to remove a pelvic abscess.
"Let these images serve to bring peace to the people of Venezuela regarding the health of President Chavez," his gleeful-looking Communications Minister Andres Izarra said, repeatedly showing the images on Venezuelan state TV.
Officials are hoping the 56-year-old will be back for July 5 when Venezuela hosts regional heads of state. The summit on Margarita island is timed to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Venezuela’s independence from Spain.
But one state media employee told Reuters coverage plans were on hold after word the president would not return on time.
Famous for hogging the airwaves and giving hours-long speeches, Chavez went to ground after his surgery in Havana, triggering a wave of speculation across the politically polarized South American nation he has ruled since 1999.
In the images, Chavez looked thinner than usual but in better condition than photos released shortly after surgery.
He is seen walking, chatting and sitting with the former Cuban president, who is a close friend and political mentor.
Venezuelan and Cuban state media plastered the images of Chavez and Castro on front pages on Wednesday. "Onward, Comandante, your people await you!" trumpeted Caracas daily Vea.
Both governments said more footage of Chavez would be shown at midday on Wednesday. Supporters were planning to hold a prayer service for his health at a Caracas church.
QUESTIONS
The new footage left plenty of questions unanswered: Why has Chavez still not addressed the nation? If his surgery was straightforward and successful, why is he still in Havana 19 days later? Who is running government?
"It raises more questions than it answers," the political newsletter LatinNews said. "The hermetic seal over the president’s health and his apparent stubborn refusal not to follow constitutional procedure in appointing a caretaker premier is patently not how things should work in a democracy."
The affair has highlighted the lack of an obvious successor for Chavez, who has utterly dominated Venezuelan politics while driving forward his "21st Century Socialism" reforms.
It had also threatened to turn the local political scene on its head before next year’s presidential election.
Were Chavez to be incapacitated, there would probably be a fight for power among his closest allies and the opposition might demand immediate elections, analysts said.
Given past violence, especially around a short-lived 2002 coup against Chavez, the potential for more trouble always lurks in a nation brimming with arms and political bitterness.
Some Venezuelans think the president has deliberately let the rumors grow over the last two weeks so he can smoke out the opinions and positions of both allies and enemies alike, before making a triumphant return to the rejoicing of supporters.
"This way of handling information is typical of totalitarian regimes. It creates uncertainty and rumors and can be used in a political way to benefit his return," opposition legislator Maria Corina Machado told Reuters.
"This is profoundly irresponsible."
Opposition politicians in Venezuela had been careful not to speculate too much in public about Chavez’s condition, preferring to accuse him of abusing the constitution by prolonging his absence without naming a temporary substitute.
That left opposition-leaning media as the ones talking up the rumors of serious ill health with the most vigor.
"The opposition have tried to look serious throughout this, but Chavez will still come back spitting blood at the ’ultra-right’ for wishing him dead," said one Western diplomat in Caracas. "It’s classic Chavez tactics, probably learned from Fidel Castro’s political book."
Venezuelan bond prices had risen this week as some on Wall Street viewed the possibility of a major health problem for Chavez as a positive development for markets. The new images of him could prompt profit-taking.
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