Cancer Ward

With Hugo Chavez ailing, Venezuelans are just starting to realize how dependent they've become on him.

BY PETER WILSON | JULY 12, 2011

CARACAS — Marianela Hernandez's biggest worry used to be finding cooking oil and meat in her working-class neighborhood here in the Venezuelan capital.

That was before Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez decamped to Havana, Cuba, for mysterious medical treatment and belatedly announced late last month, after returning to Caracas, that he has cancer. Now Hernandez has far more pressing concerns: the president's health and the turmoil that awaits if he doesn't recover.

"If El Comandante can't continue, what will we do?" said Hernandez, a 55-year-old office cleaner. "What will happen to the programs he started, his support for the people? What will happen to us?"

She's not the only one obsessed with the president's illness: Venezuela has virtually stopped paying attention to anything else. The 200th anniversary of the country's founding on July 5 has been crowded out of the popular imagination, as have the remarkable recent successes of the national soccer team in Copa America in Argentina.

This outsize influence in sickness matches Chávez's larger-than-life presence in health. Unlike any other leader in Venezuela's democratic history, Chávez has dominated daily life, steadily amassing power by eroding the autonomy of the country's political institutions. Since being sworn in as president in 1999, Chávez has actively sought to change the country's political, social, and economic realities, leading many of his followers to portray him as the country's messianic savior.

Chávez draws the bulk of his support from the country's poor who make up 80 percent of the country's 28 million population. They support the president because of his popular affect, but also simply because they benefit from the social programs he has introduced -- free housing and low-interest loans.

That's not to say that Venezuelans are universally hoping for a speedy recovery. Roberto Carmona, an out-of-work computer programmer, is baffled by the prevalent hand-wringing. "He's ruining the country with his policies, so I hope he has to step down. Maybe I can find a job when companies start investing again. But I wouldn't count him out just yet," Carmona said, sighing. "As we say here, mala hierba nunca muere [weeds never die]."

The president has been uncommonly reticent about his condition: This is a man, after all, who once on his Sunday television show, Aló Presidente, discussed a bout of diarrhea he had recently suffered. Chávez has long admitted that he hasn't been taking good care of himself, blaming late-night snacking (poundcake is apparently a favorite) for his ballooning weight.

In early July, Chávez admitted that doctors had removed a cancerous tumor from his abdomen on June 20 and that a program of chemotherapy had been initiated four days later. Since then, Vice President Elías Jaua has only said that Chávez is undergoing "rigorous treatment" and that "the president is moving along in his process." He gave no further details.

It's this kind of piecemeal and inconsistent communication from the government about Chávez's health that has fed the rampant public speculation. While Chávez stonewalls, his few and carefully orchestrated public appearances are viewed over and over for possible clues about his health as he receives treatment in Caracas.

Many Venezuelans have been willing to offer amateur diagnoses on the basis of such photographic evidence. "He looks paler now and speaks more slowly," said Nora Alvarez, a 32-year-old housewife who has never voted for Chávez. "He looks thinner and less animated. He's not the same man." She is convinced that Chávez is dying because he has abandoned his habit of ending all speeches with the words Patria, Socialismo o Muerte (Fatherland, Socialism, or Death).

"He doesn't want to tempt fate," she said.

Forget dying. Not everyone believes that Chávez has cancer. Some think that his illness may be a sham to gain sympathy in the run-up to next year's election. Chávez remains the country's most popular politician, with an approval rating of about 50 percent -- though that marks a decline from 2006, when he received more than 60 percent of the votes.

"He could have had liposuction in Cuba for all we know," said Santiago Cruz, who owns a pet store in Caracas. "This whole cancer thing could be a fabrication, something that Fidel [Castro] could have counseled him to do. The fact is we have no idea what he really has."

Given that he is 56 years old and the tumor was located in his abdomen, some doctors have speculated that Chávez may be suffering from advanced colon or prostate cancer, a diagnosis that would require aggressive therapy if he is to survive at all.

Increasingly, opposition politicians are calling for full disclosure; the government has responded with silence.

 SUBJECTS: SOUTH AMERICA
 

Peter Wilson is a journalist who has lived in Venezuela since 1992. The Caracas bureau chief for Bloomberg news for nearly 11 years, he is writing a book on Hugo Chávez and his revolution.

ARTURBARRERA

1:59 AM ET

July 13, 2011

Nothing Will Change

You miss Adam's brother and godfather Diosdado
I will summarize in a tweet of today that nothing has changed

@YvonneReyesC
Yvonne Reyes Caldera
A Alejandro Peña Esclusa no le permiten ir al medico. A @mariafiuni no la dejan tomar el sol... Para que rezas? Para que molestas a Dios?

 

DFGBVDFVHG

7:43 AM ET

July 13, 2011

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J DORY

12:24 PM ET

July 13, 2011

Dear oh dear. What a surprise. Capitalist Journo Hates Chavez!

I'm not interested in Peter Wilson's current perspective, embellished with the marvellous gift of 20/20 hindsight - what I want to know is what did he, as Bloomberg's Caracas bureau chief throughout Chavez' time in office, have to say about the coup d'etat and serial murders organised by the Caraceno opposition and their US handlers in 2002 for the sake of the international markets (their first strike was to gun down several of their own supporters (this was testified to by a CNN journo who became peripherally involved); the lockout (which the upper classes tried to paint as a 'general workers' strike' in 2003 to wreck the economy (and which overwhelmingly wasn't); and the proven rigging of elections not by Chavez but by the opposition and the US via agencies such as NED and USAID orgs like SUMATE in Caracas?
DId he condemn this behaviour at the time or is he going to devote a few throwaway lines in his book to it to make it look like he's objective and balanced?
What does he think about the CIA's own stats which show Chavez has funnelled the oil wealth away from the back pockets of the Caraceno elite and into the pockets of the poor, halving Venezuela's level of extreme poverty (which had taken around 500 yrs to build up) in just a decade?
For all his faults I would say he has done an extraordinary job. And he also stopped the US initiating a fascist aided coup in Bolivia when I was living there a few years back as well, so Muchas Gracias Presidente Chavez y espero que mejores lo mas pronto posible.
Firmado Un Amigo.

 

PALMER

2:57 PM ET

July 13, 2011

Conspiracy theories

You left out the UN black helicopters--aren't they always necessary for a conspiracy theory?

It is always astonishing that people can still believe in the economic system that destroyed the Soviet Union and has kept the Cuban people in poverty. Even the Chinese Communist Party recognizes that state control of the economy doesn't work.

When Chavez goes (hopefully soon), it will take a decade or more to undo most of what he has done and put Venezuela on a path to recovery. Laissez faire capitalism won't do it, but neither will communism. There are prosperous developed economies in plenty to take for an example. The U.S. model won't work for Venezuela, but there are lots of other market economies to emulate.

 

ORMONDOTVOS

7:47 PM ET

July 13, 2011

Bloomberg Journalist snipes at Chavismo.

There. I fixed that for you.

I suppose Foreign Policy has to run this yellow junk, but it would be nice if it were paired with someone like Clif Ross, who doesn't have his nose up the CIA's rear.

Yes, Chavez has reversed five hundred years of oppression, but never a word of who or what was doing the oppressing.

Never a word of why the oil production is lower. Reminds of the bleating about how badly communism does when it's crushed under the capitalist bootheel.

Ugh.

 

RON PLYMEL

5:36 AM ET

August 11, 2011

cancer ward

The story takes place in the men's cancer ward of a hospital in a city in Soviet Central Asia. The patients in Ward 13 all suffer from cancer, but differ in age, personality, nationality, and social class (as if such a thing could be possible in the Soviet "classless" society!). We are first introduced to sara jay, a Communist Party functionary, who enters the hospital because of a rapidly-growing neck tumor.

We soon learn, however, that the book's central character is Oleg Kostoglotov, a young man who has recently been discharged from a penal camp and is now "eternally" exiled to this particular province. Only two weeks earlier, he was admitted to the ward in grave condition from an unspecified tumor, but he has responded rapidly to radiation therapy. Among the doctors are Zoya, a medical student; Vera Gangart, a young radiologist; and Lyudmila Dontsova, the chief of radiation therapy.
Rusanov and Kostoglotov respond to therapy and are eventually discharged; other patients remain in the ward, get worse, or are sent home to die. In the end Kostoglotov boards a train to the site of his "eternal" exile: "The long awaited happy life had come, it had come! But Oleg somehow did not recognize it."