The Province

Maduro becomes interim leader

Uncertaint­y reigns as country mourns death of President Hugo Chavez

- FRANK BAJAK AND FABIOLA SANCHEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

— A flag-draped coffin carrying the body of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez floated over a sea of supporters Wednesday on its way to a military academy where it will lie in state. Away from the procession route, jittery Venezuelan­s facing an uncertain future without their larger-thanlife leader flocked to supermarke­ts and gas stations to stock up on supplies, preparing for uncertaint­y after Chavez succumbed to cancer.

Tens of thousands lined the streets or walked with the casket in the capital, many weeping as the body approached, led by a grim drum major. Other mourners pumped their fists and held aloft images of the late president, amid countless waving yellow, blue and red Venezuelan flags.

“The fight goes on! Chavez lives!” shouted the mourners in unison, many through eyes red from crying late into the night.

Chavez’s bereaved mother Elena Frias de Chavez leaned against her son’s casket, while a priest read a prayer before the procession left the military hospital where Chavez died at the age of 58. Vicepresid­ent Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s anointed successor, walked with the crowd, along with cabinet members and uniformed soldiers.

“I feel so much pain. So much pain,” said Yamile Gil, a 38-year-old housewife. “We never wanted to see our president like this. We will always love him.”

The former paratroope­r’s body will remain at the military academy until his Friday funeral, which promises to draw leaders from all over the world. Already, the presidents of Argentina, Uruguay and Bolivia have arrived to mourn a man whose passing leaves an enormous void in the region’s antiAmeric­an left.

“The Chavez-less era begins,” declared a front-page headline in Caracas’s El Universal newspaper.

But even in death, Chavez’s orders were being heeded in a country covered with posters bearing his image and graffiti pledging “We are all Chavez!”

Maduro will continue to run Venezuela as interim president and will stand as candidate of Chavez’s socialist party in an election the country’s constituti­on requires be called within 30 days.

In a late-night tweet, Venezuelan state television said defence minister Adm. Diego Molero had pledged military support for Maduro’s candidacy against likely opposition candidate Henrique Capriles, despite a constituti­onal mandate that the armed forces play a nonpolitic­al role.

For diehard Chavistas who camped out all night outside the military hospital, Wednesday was the first full day without a leader many described as a father figure, an icon in the mould of the early19th century liberator Simon Bolivar.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? A crowd surrounds the funeral cortège of late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Wednesday.
— GETTY IMAGES A crowd surrounds the funeral cortège of late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Wednesday.

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