EDITORIAL - Life after Chávez

Mar 07, 2013

KINGSTON, Jamaica - AS WRENCHING as it may still have been for his mass of supporters around the world, few could claim that Tuesday's death of Hugo Chávez, the charismatic and controversial president of Venezuela, had been entirely unexpected.
There was a sense that statements in recent days by his deputy, Nicolas Maduro, about the deteriorated state of Chávez's health were preparing the Venezuelan public for the inevitable. In that regard, Chávez's February 18 return to Venezuela from Cuba might have been a coming home to die.
Indeed, the Venezuelan president was keenly aware of his own mortality and the fact, perhaps, that he was terminally ill. Before leaving for Havana last December for his fourth surgery for the cancer that eventually claimed his life, Chávez anointed Maduro as the man to whom Venezuelans should look "to continue, if I can't".

You may also be interested in:

caricom-1
La CSME, la seguridad alimentaria y la financiación climática encabezan la agenda de la Cumbre de CARICOM en las Bahamas.
The CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME); food security; climate change and climate finance; health; and security will be among the major topics when Heads of Government of
caricom_admin
A Building Energy Efficiency Project was introduced at the CARICOM Secretariat in December 2014
La Secretaría de CARICOM y la Agencia Caribeña para Soluciones de Justicia (CAJS) forjan una alianza para acelerar la transformación digital.
La Secretaría de CARICOM (CCS) y la Agencia Caribeña para Soluciones de Justicia (CAJS) han establecido una importante alianza con el objetivo de impulsar la transformación digital y mejorar la pre
caricom_admin