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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez dies

Chávez's political moves brought criticism from the United States and his ties with some of the world's most notorious leaders exacerbated his relationship with Washington.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, the socialist leader who assailed U.S. influence in Latin America in his campaign against capitalism and democratic freedoms, died Tuesday. He was 58.
Chávez succumbed to cancer after months of treatments in Cuba, whose communist leaders he admired and propped up with cheap Venezuelan oil.
In power for 14 years, Chávez used oil money and vitriol to spread his "Bolivarian revolution" to neighboring states, playing a role in bolstering leftward turns in Ecuador and Bolivia and backing revolutionaries in Colombia. He hectored the United States often, belittling its leaders and cozying up to its adversaries.
In Venezuela, Chávez was a hero to impoverished villagers who had never shared in the country's oil wealth and benefited from housing improvements and health clinics. Detractors saw him as a dictator, packing the oil industry with incompetent cronies, repressing political opponents and ruining Venezuela's attempts to modernize and democratize.
  • Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez speaks at the presidential palace on Oct. 13, 2012, in Caracas.
  • Venezuelans pray for President Chavez on Dec. 11, 2012, at Simon Bolivar Square in Caracas. Cuban doctors operated on Chavez after his cancer reappeared despite a year and a half of treatment.
  • Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez holds up pistols belonging to independence hero Simon Bolivar during a ceremony marking the 229th anniversary of Bolivar's birth on July 24, 2012, at Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas.  Bolivar is the namesake of Chavez's Bolivarian Revolution movement and his government was completing a new mausoleum to house Bolivar's remains.
  • Venezuelan President Chavez takes a drink during a campaign rally on Oct. 4, 2012, in Caracas.
  • Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez speaks to a crowd during an Oct. 4, 2012, campaign rally in Caracas.
  • Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, left, and President Chavez greet supporters on Sept. 8, 2009, in Porlamar, Venezuela.
  • Actress Susan Sarandon, left, meets Chavez and his daughter, Rosa, at a Sept. 23, 2009, reception in New York.
  • President Chavez delivers a speech at the national stadium on Sept. 4, 2009, in Sweidah Province, Syria.
  • President Obama receives a book from Hugo Chavez during a multilateral meeting at the Summit of the Americas on April 18, 2009, at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Port of Spain, Trinidad.
  • Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, left, walks with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, Bolivian President Evo Morales and Honduran President Manuel Zelaya before the start of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas summit on Feb. 2, 2009, in Caracas.
  • Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez rides a bike during his weekly television program on June 8, 2008, in Santa Ana de Coro, Venezuela.
  • A soldier stands in front of a bus decorated with a photograph of President Chavez on March 6, 2008, at a checkpoint in Paraguaipoa.
  • President Chavez, left, and Ecuaodoran President Rafael Correa speak at a news conference on March 8, 2008, at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas. Chavez called a Colombian raid that killed two dozen rebels in Ecuador a "war crime," and joined Ecuador's president in demanding international condemnation of the cross-border attack.
  • Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, left, listens to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as Chavez drives to the airport on March 12, 2007, in Managua.
  • President Chavez walks with Cristina Fernandez de Kircher and her husband, Argentine President Nestor Kirchner, on March 9, 2007, at the presidential residence in Buenos Aires.
  • Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, left, is greeted by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Sept. 17, 2006, at Simon Bolivar Airport in La Guaira.
  • President Chavez meets Pope Benedict XVI on May 11, 2006, in Vatican City.
  • Louisa Rodriguez wears a shirt with a picture of President Chavez on Nov. 22, 2005, in Quincy, Mass. An oil company owned by Venezuela provided heavily discounted heating oil to low-income families in the USA.
  • Thousands of Hugo Chavez supporters march on June 6, 2004, during a demonstration to defeat a planned referendum on his rule in Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Venezuelan President Chavez waves to supporters during a break at the XIV Summit of Andean Presidents on June 27, 2003, in Rionegro, Colombia.
  • President Chavez addresses the 54th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 21, 1999, in New York.
  • President Chavez meets with Venezuelan baseball players Roger Cedeno, left, Melvin Mora and Edgardo Alfonso from the New York Mets and Toronto Blue Jay Kelvim Escobar before a game at Shea Stadium on June 9, 199 in New York.
  • Then Venezuelan President-elect Hugo Chavez is welcomed on Jan. 16, 1999, by Cuban leader Fidel Castro at Jose Marti Airport in Havana.
  • Then Venezuelan presidential candidate Hugo Chavez is greeted by supporters on Dec. 2, 1998, at a rally in Caracas.
Chávez dismantled Venezuela's democratic political system, rewrote the country's constitution in his favor, clamped down on freedom of expression and tried to spread his version of socialism throughout the continent. Some scholars said his claim to be working for the poor rang hollow.
"He deserves credit for putting his finger on a legitimate grievance in Venezuela about social exclusion and injustice," said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue. However, "Chávez will be remembered as a leader who squandered a rare opportunity to transform his country in a positive way."
Chávez was born to schoolteacher parents in July 1954. As a young man, he entered the Venezuelan Academy of Military Sciences and joined the army when leftists were pushing for radical alternatives to growing poverty. A decline in oil prices in the 1980s caused a drop in social spending and riots in which hundreds died, and Chávez drifted toward left-wing groups outside the military that supported a violent takeover of the government.
In 1992, Chávez, a lieutenant colonel, attempted a coup with others but failed, and he was jailed until 1994. Upon release, he ran for president and won on a vow to end corruption. Faced with strong political opposition, Chávez used referendums to strengthen his power, such as increasing the seats on the Supreme Court to pack it with his loyalists.
In 2002, military officers pushed Chávez out of office briefly after he ordered a crackdown on political opponents. Thousands of workers at the state oil company, PDVSA, went on strike to protest the crackdown and were fired as Chávez solidified control over the agency and installed supporters.
Chávez won the allegiance of the poor by sending thousands of Cuban-trained doctors into rural areas, but the middle class and others chafed at his state seizure of industries, banks and private farmland and repression of political and media freedoms. Rising oil prices gave him the money to lavish on supporters.
Such moves brought criticism from the United States, but poor Venezuelans kept him in power at election time.
"Chávez is Venezuela, that's the truth. The revolution will always be felt on the streets," said Gloria Torres, 50, who had organized prayer meetings for Chávez as he was undergoing cancer treatments.
A sizable portion of Venezuelan society detested Chávez. They seethed as he abolished presidential term limits in 2009 and conducted hours-long television appearances that Venezuelan media were forced to air. He shut down media outlets he deemed too critical of his government. His political opponents were too fragmented to mount a serious challenge.
"Hugo Chávez and the Venezuelan state media infrastructure unabashedly (used) state resources as part of a re-election campaign," said Roberto Velásquez, communication director of Citizen Monitoring, a Caracas-based non-governmental organization (NGO).
Chávez floated on both rhetoric and huge oil reserves that were determined in 2011 to be greater even than Saudi Arabia's. But the Venezuelan economy buckled under Chavez's policies. Toward the end of his tenure, inflation was at 30%. Food shortages were common, and even fuel was rationed because of Chávez's meddling with PDVSA.
His state seizure of the facilities of major U.S. and foreign companies and reneging on oil rights contracts damaged investor confidence in the country and caused a drop in foreign investment.
"Nationalizations, price controls, exchange controls, hostile labor legislation, real exchange rate appreciation, shortage of dollars. That's the main legacy," said Boris Segura of investment bank Nomura in New York. "Chávez has not fulfilled the main promise when he was elected, which was to diversify Venezuela from oil."
A number of countries in Latin America welcomed Chávez's "Bolivarian revolution," named for the 19th-century revolutionary Simón Bolivar. He encouraged and supported Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, Rafael Correa in Ecuador and Evo Morales in Bolivia.
Chávez emerged from the shadow of mentor Fidel Castro of Cuba, turning Venezuela into a lifeline to the communist island by furnishing it with billions of dollars every year. Once-prosperous ties between Venezuela and Colombia became strained as evidence emerged that Chávez had supported the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the leftist rebels who were fighting paramilitaries in Colombia for control.
Chávez's anti-American vitriol heightened during the U.S. presidency of George W. Bush. "The devil came here yesterday," Chávez said of Bush while theatrically sniffing the air at the United Nations in 2006. "It smells of sulfur still."
The relationship with Washington was exacerbated by Chávez's alliances with some of the world's most notorious leaders. Venezuela hosted Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and supported Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
"The troubles Chávez has caused won't end immediately with his passing, because Chávez has run the Venezuelan economy and political system into the ground, and his cronies will be trying to preserve the corrupt system which benefits them," said Carl Meacham, a senior Republican aide on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Some Latin America leaders said Chávez failed to use his popularity to unify Venezuelans and improve their lives, turning instead to typical caudillo tactics that have hobbled advancement in post-colonial Latin America.
Shifter cited former Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who helped make Brazil a leader among the world's emerging economies without resorting to authoritarianism.
"As a measure of Chávez's declining influence, it is notable that, when he ran for president of Peru in 2006, Ollanta Humala proudly associated himself with Chávez, but then distanced himself from Chávez when he realized it was no longer politically advantageous," Shifter said.
In 2012, Chávez spoke to reporters as he prepared to leave for Havana to undergo more cancer treatments, having arrived at the airport in Caracas in a motorcade vehicle affixed with an image of Jesus Christ.
"I dreamt a while ago of Christ who came and said, 'Chávez, rise. It is not time to die. It's time to live,'" he said as he prepared to board a plane. "Independent of my personal destiny, this revolution already has its own momentum and will not be stopped."
Collected from :http://www.usatoday.com


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