Venezuela announces death of president Hugo Chavez

Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez addresses the 61st General Assembly of the United Nations in New York in 2006. Venezuela tonight announced the socialist leader had died following a two-year battle with cancer. Photograph: Reuters

Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez addresses the 61st General Assembly of the United Nations in New York in 2006. Venezuela tonight announced the socialist leader had died following a two-year battle with cancer. Photograph: Reuters

Tue, Mar 5, 2013, 00:00

   

Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez has died after a two-year battle with cancer, ending the socialist leader's 14-year rule of the South American country, vice president Nicolas Maduro said in a televised speech.

The flamboyant 58-year-old leader had undergone four operations in Cuba for a cancer that was first detected in his pelvic region in mid-2011. His last surgery was on December 11th and he had not been seen in public since.

"It's a moment of deep pain," Mr Maduro, accompanied by senior ministers, said, his voice choking.

Chavez easily won a new six-year term at an election in October and his death will devastate millions of supporters who adored his charismatic style, anti-US rhetoric and oil-financed policies that brought subsidised food and free health clinics to long-neglected slums.

Detractors, however, saw his one-man style, gleeful nationalizations and often harsh treatment of opponents as traits of an egotistical dictator whose misplaced statist economics wasted a historic bonanza of oil revenues.