Venezuela's Chavez needs another operation
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
speaks with workers at a tractor factory in Barinas
Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez will undergo another
operation in the coming days after doctors in Cuba found a lesion in his pelvis where
surgeons removed a large cancerous tumor last year, he said.The 57-year-old
socialist leader confirmed he travelled to Havana for the tests on Saturday. Rumors
of the unannounced trip had prompted a flood of speculation among the
opposition and supporters alike that he was at death's door. Chavez’s health is
the wildcard ahead of an October 7 presidential election, when he will seek a
new six-year term. He has never given many details about his condition so the
news he needs more surgery was bound to feed doubts about his recovery.” There
is no metastasis, just this small lesion in the same place where they removed
the tumor," the president said during a televised tour of a factory in his
home state of Barinas on Tuesday.” Because of the growing rumors, I'm obliged
to give this information now ... it's a small lesion, about two centimetres
across, very clearly visible. This will need to be taken out, it needs more
surgery, supposedly less complicated than before.” He said the next operation would
take place in the coming days, but that it had not yet been decided where.” No
one should be alarmed ... I'm in good physical condition to face this new
battle," he said. "It has to be verified whether there is any link
with the tumor that was there before.” In a phone call to state TV later, the
president added: "No one can say if it (the lesion) is malignant, but
there is a high probability because it is in the same place.” He had insisted
he was completely recovered, although medical experts had said it was too soon
to make such a call. Donning a bright red hard hat to stroll around the
proposed site of the giant Veneminsk factory, the president joked with workers
and looked to be in reasonable health.A US cancer doctor told that with
such little detail it was impossible to know his real condition, but that the
latest turn of events did not look good.” They have always played their cards
close to their chest, so you never really know," said the doctor, who has
followed the case from afar but asked not to be named.” But a two centimeter
lesion in the same space where he had cancer before means there is a high
probability of malignancy. This is serious, very significant.” Venezuela’s
information minister had earlier denounced a report that Chavez had been rushed
back to Havana for emergency treatment as part of a "dirty war by
scum," launched by the opposition ahead of the election.A prominent
opposition-leaning Venezuelan journalist, Nelson Bocaranda, wrote on Monday
that Chavez, who had two operations in Havana last June, had returned
unexpectedly to Cuba over the weekend and that some of his relatives had flown
there too. Chavez allies were scathing about Bocaranda after the president
appeared on television. Deputy Foreign Minister Temir Porras joked on Twitter:
"They'll have to take me for an emergency operation in Cuba. I'm dying of laughter!” Local
political analyst Luis Vicente Leon said any new "sympathy"
bounce in support linked to the president's illness would be lower and
short-lasting the second time round."Clearly the tensions within Chavismo
will grow because of the uncertainty generated by this announcement," he
said.The public's reactions to Chavez's news were mixed."Maybe it's time for a
change in the country. Everything points to that," said Elizabeth
Gonzalez, a 42-year-old housewife in Caracas. Car park attendant William Perez
said the president had looked alright, if a bit swollen-faced.” He didn't
appear bad or tired. He's a fighter, and like his motto he'll live and he'll
conquer!" he said. Barclays Capital noted that polls show more than
three-quarters of Venezuelans believed Chavez had fully
recovered."However, if that perception changes it could significantly
affect Chavez's re-election chances, not only physically limiting his ability
to campaign but also creating doubts about the viability of a new term in
office," it said. The opposition is newly united behind one candidate -
youthful state governor Henrique Capriles - and see the vote as their best
chance to end Chavez's 13 years in power. Recent opinion polls have given
Chavez an edge over Capriles, thanks partly to a huge program of new state
spending on social projects. But about a third of Venezuelans remain undecided,
and competition for their votes will be intense.One medical source close to the
team treating Chavez in Venezuela said he had been suffering a tumor lysis, or
cell breakdown, which carried symptoms including a high fever.Before Chavez's
reappearance on Tuesday, Venezuelan analyst Diego Moya-Ocampos had suggested
his absence could well be a strategy by Chavez's campaign team to put the focus
back on him and not Capriles, who since winning the opposition primary had been
at the center of media and political attention.He said the fact that the latest
rumors had spread so fast just underlined the anxiety among loyalists each time
Chavez vanished from view for more than a couple of days. Chavez apologised to
his supporters on Tuesday, saying he knew the speculation about his health was
upsetting for them.” Always these rumors ... There are people who want me dead,
who hate me so much," he said. "I am very sorry, because I know that
while some people are happy, the majority are suffering.” Venezuela’s widely traded debt was largely
flat to slightly higher. Its 2027 Global bond was up 0.56 points in price to
bid 80.563, yielding 12.041%, unchanged after Chavez spoke.
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