Chavez aides allege 'psychological war'
VENEZUELA: Hugo Chavez's top aides accused the opposition and the
media Thursday of using the Venezuelan president's poor health to wage a
"psychological war" to destabilize the country, as the cancer-stricken
leader struggled with a severe lung infection.
The hardline stance was adopted after Vice President Nicolas Maduro
returned from a visit with the ailing Chavez in Cuba, where he is
suffering from complications more than three weeks after undergoing
cancer surgery. Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said a "severe
pulmonary infection" that Chavez developed after the surgery had led to
a "respiratory insufficiency" requiring strict adherence to his
treatment.
Villegas then leveled the charge that the president's health had
become the target of a campaign to destabilize the government and finish
off its socialist revolution. The government "warns the Venezuelan
people about the psychological war that the transnational media complex
has unleashed around the health of the chief of state, with the ultimate
goal of destabilizing the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela," he said in
a televised statement.
The statement came amid rising demands at home for a detailed
accounting of Chavez's condition and whether he is fit to take the oath
of office January 10 for another six year term.
Venezuela's constitution calls for new elections to be held within 30
days if the president is unable to take the oath of office or dies
during his first four years in office.
But Maduro and National Assembly speaker Diosdado Cabello, the
regime's number two and three leaders, made clear on their return from
Cuba that they were not preparing for a transfer of power.
"Here there is only one transition and it began at least six years
ago and it was decreed by comandante Hugo Chavez," Maduro said,
referring to the launch in 2006 of the president's socialist revolution.
Maduro and Cabello spoke on Venezuelan state television, as they
toured a coffee packaging plant in Caracas that had been taken over by
the state.Both men went out of their way to deny rumors of an internal
power struggle between them, with Maduro saying they had sworn before
Chavez that they would remain united. "We are here more united than
ever," said Maduro, who is Chavez's handpicked successor. "And we have
sworn before comandante Hugo Chavez, and we reaffirmed to him today in
our oath ... that we would be united with our people." Referring to the
reported rift, Cabello said the opposition would have to wait "2000
years for that to happen" and said "no conciliation is possible with
this opposition."
AFP |