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Venezuela’s interim leader launches inquiry into Hugo Chavez 'poisoning'

 

Tim Walker
Wednesday 13 March 2013 15:53 EDT
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Hugo Chavez died last week aged 58
Hugo Chavez died last week aged 58 (Getty Images)

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Venezuela’s interim leader has opened an investigation into the death of Hugo Chavez, amid speculation the late president’s cancer was the result of an elaborate poisoning plot by foreign enemies.

The acting President Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s chosen successor, told the Telesur TV network, “We have the intuition that our commander Chavez was poisoned by dark forces that wanted him out of the way... Everything seems to indicate that they affected his health using the most advanced techniques.”

Mr Chavez, who died last week aged 58, voiced similar suspicions after he was first diagnosed with the disease in his pelvic region in June 2011.

Speaking to the BBC, the country’s Oil Minister, Rafael Ramirez, explicitly accused the United States and Israel of responsibility for Mr Chavez’s demise. In the hours before the President’s death was announced last Tuesday, Mr Maduro expelled two diplomats from the US embassy in Caracas, claiming they were part of a plot to “destabilise Venezuela”. However, the country’s opposition sees the claims as a scaremongering tactic designed to hold the electorate’s attention in the run-up to a snap presidential election on 14 April.

The opposition leader Henrique Capriles has accused the socialist government of exploiting Mr Chavez’s memory for political gain.

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