STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Official: Maduro will temporarily assume the presidency until elections are held
- A state funeral for Chavez will be held Friday, Venezuela's foreign minister says
- Venezuela's defense minister says troops are deploying to ensure safety
- "We must unite now more than ever," Venezuela's vice president says
Venezuelan officials called for peace and unity after President Hugo Chavez's death on Tuesday, emphasizing in state television broadcasts that all branches of the government and the military were standing together.
Elections will be held in 30 days, and Vice President Nicolas Maduro will assume the presidency in the interim, Foreign Minister Elias Jaua said in an interview broadcast on state-run VTV.
Tearing up as he announced Chavez's death after a long battle with cancer, Maduro called on Venezuelans to remain respectful.
"We must unite now more than ever," Maduro said.
Henrique Capriles Radonski, a former presidential candidate and opposition leader, said Venezuelans should come together.
"This is not the time for difference," he said. "It is the time for unity. It is the time for peace."
Supporters of Chavez
poured into a Caracas square soon after news of his death spread. Some
wept openly. Others waved flags and held up pictures of the late
president.
There were no reports of
major violence, but there was palpable tension in the streets, as some
Venezuelans heading home from work tried to steer clear of Chavez's
fervent supporters.
Venezuela's military is
in a "process of deploying ... to ensure the safety of all Venezuelans"
and to support the country's constitution in the wake of Chavez's death,
said Adm. Diego Molero, Venezuela's defense minister.
Venezuela prepares for funeral, elections
Venezuela's government
has declared seven days of national mourning, Jaua said. At Venezuelan
embassies around the world Tuesday, flags were flying at half mast.
Chavez's remains will be
taken to a military academy in Caracas on Wednesday, Jaua said. There
he will lie in state for three days. His state funeral will be held
there on Friday morning, Jaua said.
The announcement of
Chavez's death came hours after Maduro met with the country's top
political and military leaders about Chavez's worsening health condition
and suggested someone may have deliberately infected Chavez with
cancer.
Chavez first announced
his cancer diagnosis in June 2011, but the government never revealed
details about his prognosis or specified what kind of cancer he had
Shortly before his last trip to Cuba for cancer surgery in December, Chavez tapped Maduro as the man he wanted to replace him.
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Hugo Chavez's legacy
"He is one of the young leaders with the greatest ability to continue, if I cannot," Chavez said.
Maduro made no mention
of running for election in his public comments Tuesday, but he is widely
expected to be the United Socialist Party of Venezuela's candidate for
the job.
During Chavez's absence
from the political stage over the past three months, Maduro has been
front and center. He has spoken at political rallies around the country
and delivered updates about Chavez on national television, drawing
growing support from Chavez loyalists.
Opposition critics have
said he was campaigning for office -- a claim the government has denied.
Even as Jaua said Tuesday that Maduro would temporarily assume the
presidency, some critics questioned whether that was constitutional,
since Chavez missed his inauguration and was never officially sworn in.
Opposition politicians
haven't said who will represent them in the election. But as speculation
mounted over Chavez's health in recent weeks, many had turned to
Capriles, who lost to Chavez in October's presidential contest.
On Tuesday, Capriles called for a national dialogue including all Venezuelans, not just Chavez's supporters.
"Today there are
thousands, maybe millions, of Venezuelans who are asking themselves what
will happen, who feel anxiety, and including those who feel afraid,"
Capriles said.
Chavez supporters, critics react
Word of Chavez's death drew swift expressions of sorrow and solidarity from regional allies.
Ecuador and Cuba both announced three days of national mourning to honor Chavez.
"The national government
expresses its solidarity in light of this irreparable loss that puts
the Venezuelan people and all the region in mourning and at the same
time sends its heartfelt condolences to the family of the late champion
of Latin America," Ecuador's foreign ministry said in a statement.
Bolivian President Evo
Morales' voice cracked as he spoke to reporters, describing Chavez as
someone "who gave all his life for the liberation of the Venezuelan
people ... of all the anti-imperialists and anti-capitalists of the
world."
But longtime critics of the controversial president offered a different take.
"Hugo Chavez was a
tyrant who forced the people of Venezuela to live in fear. His death
dents the alliance of anti-U.S. leftist leaders in South America. Good
riddance to this dictator," said U.S. Rep. Ed Royce, chairman of the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs. "Venezuela once had a strong
democratic tradition and was close to the United States. Chavez's death
sets the stage for fresh elections. While not guaranteed, closer U.S.
relations with (this) key country in our Hemisphere are now possible."
Venezuela-U.S. relations surge into spotlight
Just hours before the
announcement of Chavez's death, relations between the two countries
appeared to be souring, as Venezuelan officials said they were expelling
two U.S. Embassy officials and accused them of plotting to destabilize
the country.
The U.S. officials, both
air attaches at the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, are accused of having
meetings with members of the Venezuelan military and encouraging them to
pursue "destabilizing projects," Venezuelan Foreign Minister Elias Jaua
said.
"We will not allow any
foreign interference in our country," Jaua said. "Do not think that the
situation of pain over the health of President Chavez will translate
into weakness."
State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell denied the accusations.
"Notwithstanding the
significant differences between our governments, we continue to believe
it important to seek a functional and more productive relationship with
Venezuela based on issues of mutual interest," he said. "This fallacious
assertion of inappropriate U.S. action leads us to conclude that,
unfortunately, the current Venezuelan government is not interested an
improved relationship."
After announcing the
expulsion of one attache, Maduro -- addressing the media in a lengthy
statement -- asserted that someday there will be "scientific proof" that
Chavez was somehow infected by outsiders.
"An assertion that the
United States was somehow involved in causing President Chavez's illness
is absurd, and we definitively reject it," Ventrell said.
It isn't the first time that a Venezuelan government official has implied that a plot could be behind Chavez's cancer.
Chavez made the
assertion himself in 2011, saying at a military event in Caracas that he
wondered whether the United States could be infecting Latin American
leaders with the illness.
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