Venezuela releases first photos of sick Chavez
CARACAS (AFP) – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was seen bed-ridden but smiling in photos released Friday that gave an anxious nation a first glimpse of its leader since a fourth round of cancer surgery in December.
The pictures show 58-year-old Chavez lying on his back in a Havana hospital, with his two eldest daughters at his side and leafing through Thursday’s edition of the official Cuban newspaper Granma.
Chavez supporters rejoiced at the confirmation that the president was alive.
The four images broke a virtual news blackout for Venezuelans who have been living in limbo without their media-happy comandante – a populist firebrand who is the most visible face of the Latin American left and who has irked the United States by aligning himself with Iran, Syria and Cuba.
Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez holds a copy of the Cuban newspaper Granma as his daughters, Rosa Virginia (R) and Maria watch while recovering from cancer surgery in Havana. – REUTERS
Until now, Venezuelans had not seen a photo or TV image of Chavez, nor heard the voice of a man usually omnipresent across state media. Sketchy government updates about his health fuelled speculation he was actually dead.
Chavez’s absence has also enraged political opponents, who wondered aloud who was running Venezuela, which has the world’s largest proven oil reserves.
He was last seen as he left Caracas airport on December 10 for treatment in Cuba.
On Thursday night, opposition leader Henrique Capriles kept up his assertion that the government has probably been lying about Chavez’s health, suggesting the president is in worse shape than officials have said he is.
Capriles expressed fresh anger over of the release of the pictures and said they had not clarified the president’s true health condition.
However the pro-Chavez camp was jubilant to see their hero, and could not resist a dig at the rumours simmering on social media that Chavez was no more.
“Wow! For a dead man you look really good, comandante,” tweeted mormaldonado.
“He’s alive, he’s alive! Thanks be to God and to the whole world. This is proof,” said Dora Salcedo, 67, one of dozens of Chavez fans who gathered in downtown Caracas after the photos came out.
But Venezuelans apparently will have to wait longer for the former commando to break his silence.
He has been fitted with a breathing tube in his throat, making it hard for him to speak, Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said.
That’s because of a respiratory infection that emerged after the surgery. The infection has been brought under control but “the underlying disease is not without complications,” Villegas said in a televised speech to the nation.
It was Chavez’s son in law Jorge Arreaza, also science minister, who showed the printed photos of Chavez on television.
“We wanted to share with you now some shots from last night of our commander accompanied by his two daughters Rosa Virginia and Maria Gabriela … yesterday on the day of friendship, on Valentine’s Day,” Arreaza said.
A leading political analyst here said it was a savvy move by the government to publish the photos, even if Chavez appeared to be in a somewhat debilitated state.
“It was the right move politically,” said Luis Vicente Leon, president of the firm Datanalisis.
The pictures are similar to each other, and show Chavez with the daughters, one on either side of him, looking through the Cuban newspaper. Chavez wears a white baseball-type jacket that goes up to his neck. The breathing tube is not visible, with the leader lying back, his face puffy, but smiling.


