Supporters of Hugo Chavez in Caracas
BBC
Leaders from Latin America and beyond are gathering in the Venezuelan
capital Caracas for the funeral of President Hugo Chavez.
More than two million mourners have already filed past his body at a
military academy, reports the BBC.
Chavez's body is to be embalmed and placed on permanent display,
Vice-President Nicolas Maduro says.
Later on Friday, Maduro is due to be sworn in as acting president. As
such, he must call elections within 30 days.
Hugo Chavez, who led Venezuela for 14 years, died on Tuesday aged 58
after a long battle with cancer.
More than 30 heads of state are expected to attend Friday's funeral
including Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Cuban President Raul
Castro and Belarussian leader Alexander Lukashenko.
President Ahmadinejad has praised Chavez as a "martyr" and a "wise and
revolutionary leader".
US Congressman Gregory Meeks and former Congressman William Delahunt
will represent the United States. Chavez was a fierce critic of
Washington.
Maduro said that Chavez's body would be embalmed "like Lenin and Mao
Zedong", and put on display for at least another seven days.
The body will be moved to the Caracas military museum where in 1992
Chavez - as an army officer - was captured after leading a failed coup.
Maduro said the building will be converted into a new "museum of the
revolution".
Chavez's supporters want him eventually interred in Venezuela's
national Pantheon alongside Simon Bolivar, the 19th Century independence
leader the late president claimed as his political inspiration.
However, Venezuela's constitution says people can only be admitted to
the Pantheon 25 years after their death.
Chavez was re-elected for a fourth term as president last October after
saying he had recovered from his illness.
He named Maduro as his preferred successor following the recurrence of
his cancer.
No comments:
Post a Comment