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Hugo Chavez Health Crisis:Venezuela people on the streets to support the leaders / Latin America News

A supporter of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez waves a flag with a picture of Chavez during a gathering outside Miraflores Palace in Caracas January 10, 2013. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez remained on his sickbed in Cuba on Thursday while supporters rally in his honour on the day he should have been sworn in for a new six-year term in the South American OPEC nation. The postponement of the inauguration, a first in Venezuelan history, has laid bare the gravity of Chavez's condition after complications from a fourth cancer operation in his pelvic area.
A supporter of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez waves a flag with a picture of Chavez during a gathering outside Miraflores Palace in Caracas January 10, 2013. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez remained on his sickbed in Cuba on Thursday while supporters rally in his honour on the day he should have been sworn in for a new six-year term in the South American OPEC nation. The postponement of the inauguration, a first in Venezuelan history, has laid bare the gravity of Chavez's condition after complications from a fourth cancer operation in his pelvic area.

Loud chants and massive crowds marked the day set aside for Venezuela President Hugo Chavez’s inauguration in the capital Caracas.

People have attended the rally to pay homage to Chavez in front of the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas in order to wish him well.

Venezuelans waved red flags and wore red shirts (the color of Chavez’s socialist movement) and shouted slogans, as bands played patriotic anthems.

Vice-President Nicolas Maduro led the supporters in reciting an oath of ‘absolute loyalty’ to Chavez and his revolution.

The crowd chanted the mantra together, “I swear by the Bolivarian Constitution that I will defend the presidency of Commander Chávez in the streets, with reason, with truth and with the strength and intelligence of a people that has liberated itself from the yoke of the bourgeoisie.”

Presidents from allied countries also arrived to show their support, including Jose Mujica of Uruguay, Evo Morales of Bolivia and Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua.

“He’s not here, but we’re all here as if he were with us,” supporter Florencio Rondon told NPR. “He is the greatest thing we have. He may not be here, but he lives in our hearts.”

The Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled to postpone Chavez’s swearing-in ceremony indefinitely, so his existing administration could remain in office until he is well enough to take the oath.

Chavez, who has been in power for 14 years, has been receiving treatment since June 2011 for what has been described only as cancer in the pelvic region.

Last month Chavez underwent cancer surgery in Cuba and is currently under recovery from what the government is calling severe pulmonary infection that had resulted in a “respiratory insufficiency”, as a result of complications from surgery.

The leader’s condition remains unknown.

Venezuelans have not heard directly from Chavez in a month and he did not send a message or a video recording to the crowd of supporters gathered.

Hugo Chavez Healt Crisis: Chavez’s opposition

Despite the high turnout at the rally, opposition parties are asking for more details of Chavez’s condition and are calling the delay of the formal swearing-in a violation of constitution.

The opposition is said to be organizing a counter-demonstration on January 23.

“We want to especially address the people of Venezuela, and summon the entire country to give a massive demonstration of force in the streets,” a deputy speaking on behalf of the parliamentary opposition Miriam Montilla told

Geopolitical analyst Eric Draitser believes the Chavez government could face a threat from abroad in the absence of its charismatic leader, but internal destabilization is unlikely.

“The opposition, despite all the posturing, lacks a real base of support on the ground. As we saw in the results of the recent elections opposition is still very much in the minority”, Draitser told  “In terms of international destabilization, using this opposition, is a very real possibility.”

He recounts the coup of 2002 that was “successful at least for 24 hours against Chavez, but later failed, just as any future coup will at this moment.”

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