World
Chavez returns to Venezuela after cancer surgery
Posted Tuesday, February 19 2013 at 10:32
In Summary
Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa, himself re-elected on Sunday and a close Chavez ally, jokingly said he had received congratulations from Chavez.
President Hugo Chavez surprised and in many cases delighted Venezuelans by returning home on Monday, albeit to an uncertain future, ending a more than two-month absence in Cuba for cancer treatment.
Even as passionate supporters took to the streets in noisy celebration, and foreign dignitaries sent congratulations and urged Chavez to rest, the next step for the oil-rich country and its colorful leader remained unclear.
"The president is well, he is conscious, he is very happy and motivated being back in his Venezuelan homeland," Vice President Nicolas Maduro told reporters as he left the military hospital where Chavez is being treated.
"We are all sharing that great joy, and motivation with the people," Maduro added.
But when, if at all, Chavez, who has undergone surgery four times since mid 2011, will be sworn in by the Supreme Court to begin the new term he won in elections last autumn is a mystery.
A Supreme Court source said the tribunal is ready and waiting for the go-ahead from the president and his medical team.
The ceremony does not have to be public, the source said, suggesting it could even be done from Chavez's hospital bed. Indeed, as soon as Venezuela's 58-year-old leader arrived he was hospitalized again for more treatment.
The most visible face of the Latin American left, the garrulous populist is a persistent thorn in the side of Washington for his alignment of oil-rich Venezuela with nations such as Iran, Syria and Cuba.
In his homeland, past weeks have seen citizens perplexed and many sharply divided over Chavez's future, with the opposition asserting that the government has been withholding information on his health.
The president announced his return on Twitter -- he has nearly four million followers -- and his arrival at Caracas airport was not broadcast on TV.
The latter step was unusual in this country he so thoroughly dominates both politically and personally.
"We have arrived again in our Venezuelan homeland," Chavez wrote. "Thank you, God. Thank you, my beloved people. We will continue my treatment here."
Chanting and banner-waving supporters gathered outside his hospital and Chavez supporters danced and sang in the city's central Plaza Bolivar.
Venezuelans had neither seen nor heard from the usually ubiquitous leader since he left for Cuba on December 10 for his latest round of cancer surgery, though on Friday the government released photos of him bedridden but smiling.
The government said then it was hard for Chavez to speak because he has been fitted with a tracheal tube, due to a post-operative respiratory infection.



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