Latest News:  

English>>World

Chavez "making progress" as political challenges mount

(Xinhua)

15:02, January 16, 2013

Key Words:Hugo Chavez; recovery; Venezuela VP; Venezuela; Cuba;

Related Reading:
>> Venezuelan ruling party denies concealing Chavez's health condition
>> Venezuela's Supreme Court OKs Chavez inauguration delay
>> Venezuela's Chavez to miss inauguration
>> Venezuelan President Chavez returns to Cuba for surgery

CARACAS, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) -- Venezuelan Vice President Nicolas Maduro said Tuesday that President Hugo Chavez was making progress in his recovery from cancer surgery and ensuing respiratory problems in Cuba.

"We can say that our commander is climbing the hill, he is advancing," said Maduro, who returned Monday after a three-day trip to Havana, along with parliamentary speaker Diosdado Cabello, Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez and Attorney General Cilia Flores.

Maduro said a lung infection had been controlled and Chavez's condition was improving. He was conscious but still needed help breathing.

Chavez has not been seen in public since undergoing his fourth round of cancer surgery in Havana on Dec. 11, 2012, and his allies are struggling to defend the president's rule over the OPEC nation.

Chavez went to Cuba for cancer surgery weeks after he won his third six-year term in October's election, but he was too sick to return to Caracas to take the oath of office on Jan. 10.

Chavez's prolonged absence and poor health prompted the opposition to demand an interim leader be named and a new election be held within 30 days should Chavez miss the swearing-in.

However, a day ahead of the inauguration, Venezuela's Supreme Court announced a delay of the inauguration, saying Chavez's "absence from the country should not be considered a temporary absence (from power)," and the swearing-in ceremony would take place "when the motive impeding it ceases." The move has been decried by the opposition as unconstitutional

The opposition was further outraged when Maduro, standing in for Chavez, gave a brief state-of-the-nation address and named Elias Jaua as new foreign minister on Tuesday.

"We are facing an illegitimate government," said opposition stalwart Maria Corina Machado. "We demand that decisions about Venezuela be made in Venezuela."

Henrique Capriles, Venezuela's main opposition leader, said Maduro's announcement designating Jaua as foreign minister was illegal.

"The only way a minister can be named is through a decree by the president of the republic," Capriles said.

Opposition politicians also argued the annual speech should have been postponed because the president was supposed to deliver it, and about a dozen walked out in protest.

Chavez, now 58, was first diagnosed with cancer in mid-2011 and has since undergone surgery four times, plus chemo and radiation treatment, in Havana.

Chavez remains tremendously popular in Venezuela due to his constant focus on improving living conditions for the poor.

According to the U.S.-based Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), poverty declined by nearly 50 percent from 2004 to the end of 2011, with extreme poverty down 70 percent. The CEPR also said college education doubled during the same time.

In a statement published on the center's website, analyst Mark Weisbrot said, "the 20 years prior to Chavez were an economic disaster, with per capita income actually falling between 1980 and 1998; so naturally most people have noticed the difference."

We recommend:

Nudists rally for right to bare it all

Unforgettable moments you cannot miss in December

Bloody scenery of shark hunting

Sao Paulo faces hot weather in January

Finland celebrates Epiphany with slide show

Children taking cold-resistant exercise

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:李想、张茜)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Lanzhou MAC in actual-combat drill

  2. Submarine flotilla in routine training

  3. Unforgettable moments you cannot miss in Jan.

  4. Who has stolen our air quality?

  5. Killer's girlfriend on trial for helping lover

  6. Speica focus: Breathing Dust

  7. Food and flower festivals

  8. Have fun picking strawberries in Jinshan

  9. Robot Restaurant in Harbin

  10. Japanese crazy for blood types

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Taxi drivers' plight leaves passengers out in the cold
  2. China Voice: Living better or living green?
  3. Families of migrant workers are least happy in 2012
  4. Japan’s hopes to contain China laughable
  5. Sino-Indian ties
  6. Li pledges measures in fight for clean air
  7. A competent ‘general’ is also a good ‘platoon leader’
  8. Highlighting the skills you need in a changing China
  9. Will there be another Liu Xiang in China?
  10. Heavy smog reveals generation gap

What’s happening in China

Sichuan gets its first sperm bank

  1. Sichuan gets its first sperm bank
  2. China's rich prefer to give Louis Vuitton
  3. Schools take precautions after threats
  4. China uncovers 670 gun-related crime dens
  5. Beijing leads nation on rich list