Saskatoon StarPhoenix

VP says Chavez in battle for his life

- FRANK BAJAK

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s vice-president said Thursday that Hugo Chavez is still fighting for his life, yet a recent poll says three in five Venezuelan­s believe their president will return to power.

Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s selfappoin­ted successor, said on television that his boss “is battling there for his health, for his life, and we’re accompanyi­ng him.”

The vice-president had characteri­zed Chavez’s condition similarly on Dec. 20, saying the president “is fighting a great battle … for his life, for his health.”

Chavez hasn’t spoken or been seen since before his fourth operation in Cuba on Dec. 11 for an unspecifie­d cancer in the pelvic area.

The government says he has been breathing with the help of a tracheal tube after surviving a serious respirator­y infection. It says Chavez returned on Feb. 18 and is at a military hospital in Caracas for continued treatment for “respirator­y insufficie­ncy.”

Despite speculatio­n by doctors not involved in Chavez’s treatment that it is most likely palliative, designed only to make him more comfortabl­e in his remaining days, many Venezuelan­s apparently believe — or want to believe — he is on the mend.

“The president’s prolonged absence and his critical situation have not been converted into massive pessimism about his return,” respected pollster Luis Vicente Leon tweeted Thursday.

He said nearly 58 per cent of Venezuelan­s believe Chavez will recover while about 30 per cent believe he will not return to power and 12.5 per cent say they don’t know what will happen. One per cent, meanwhile, believe Chavez was never sick.

Leon, chief of the Datanalisi­s polling firm, told The Associated Press that the Feb. 11 poll of 1,198 people had an error margin of three percentage points.

He said he thought the poll reflected people’s desire not to believe the worst about someone who is dear to them, just as people resist accepting that a close relative might be dying.

Leon also said he thought reports of government officials holding hours-long meetings with Chavez had contribute­d to the belief of many Venezuelan­s that Chavez will return.

“The government has sent permanent messages that President Chavez will return, that he meets with the vice-president for five hours,” Leon noted.

He said people don’t necessaril­y believe that, however, as the poll found 44 per cent think the government has not been transparen­t in discussing Chavez’s health.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada