Venezuela will set up a formal inquiry into suspicions that the late President Hugo Chávez’s cancer was the result of poisoning by his enemies abroad, the government said.
The accusation has been derided by critics of the government, who view it as a typical Chávez-style conspiracy theory intended to feed fears of «imperialist» threats to Venezuela’s socialist system and distract people from daily problems.
Still, acting President Nicolás Maduro vowed to push through a serious investigation into the claim, which was first raised by Chávez himself after he was diagnosed with the disease in 2011.
«We will seek the truth,» Maduro told regional TV network Telesur.
«We have the intuition that our commander Chávez was poisoned by dark forces that wanted him out of the way.»
Foreign scientists will be invited to join a government commission, the OPEC nation’s acting leader said.
Maduro, 50, is Chávez’s handpicked successor and is running as the government’s candidate in a snap presidential election on April 14 that was triggered by his boss’s death last week.
He is trying to keep voters’ attention firmly focused on Chávez to benefit from the outpouring of grief among his millions of supporters. The opposition is centering its campaign on portraying Maduro, a former bus driver, as an incompetent who, they say, is morbidly exploiting Chávez’s demise.
Running for the opposition’s Democratic Unity coalition is a business-friendly state governor, Henrique Capriles, 40, who lost to Chávez by ten percentage points in a presidential vote last year.
Tuesday was the last day of official mourning for Chávez, although ceremonies appear set to continue. His embalmed body was to be taken in procession to a military museum on Friday.
Millions have filed past Chávez’s coffin to pay homage to a man who was adored by many of the poor for his humble roots and welfare policies, but was also hated by many people for his authoritarian style and bullying of opponents.
Though Maduro has spoken about combating crime and extending development programs in the slums, he has mostly used his frequent appearances on state TV to talk about Chávez.
The 58-year-old president was diagnosed with cancer in his pelvic region in June 2011 and underwent four surgeries before dying of what sources said was metastasis in the lungs.
Maduro said it was too early to specifically point a finger over Chávez’s cancer, but noted that the United States had laboratories with experience in producing diseases.
«He had a cancer that broke all norms,» Maduro told Telesur. «Everything seems to indicate that they affected his health using the most advanced techniques … He had that intuition from the beginning.»
Maduro has compared his suspicions over Chávez’s death with allegations that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat died in 2004 from poisoning by Israeli agents.
It was the very same Chávez who had indicated to be highly suspicious that all regional leaders as Brazil’s Inacio Lula Da Silva and Dilma Rousseff, Paraguay’s Fernando Lugo, Colombia’s Alvaro Uribe were diagnosed with cancer by the same period.
The case echoes Chávez’s long campaign to convince the world that his idol and Venezuela’s independence hero Simon Bolivar died of poisoning by his enemies in Colombia in 1830.
Source: Buenos Aires Herald