Correa says he knew that Ch¨¢vez had ¡°little time left¡± as early as December
Fidel Castro told the Ecuadorian leader that the Venezuelan president was terminally ill
Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa revealed on Monday that former Cuban president Fidel Castro told him in early December that Venezuelan President Hugo Ch¨¢vez had only a few months to live.
¡°He told me that the situation was very serious and that he only had a few months left to live,¡± Correa said in an interview with the Telesur news network on the occasion of what would have been the 59th birthday of the late Ch¨¢vez. ¡°That is why we had to prepare ourselves emotionally for this difficult blow.¡±
Ch¨¢vez died on March 5 following a nearly two-year illness with cancer. Correa said that Castro had told him about Ch¨¢vez¡¯s condition in Havana in early December, the day before the Venezuelan leader was to undergo his fourth and final operation for cancer.
He recalled he spoke with Ch¨¢vez, whom he described as being in good spirits and looking healthy and radiant. But Castro then told him otherwise.
That is why we had to prepare ourselves emotionally for this difficult blow.¡±
Correa was told to be discreet about Ch¨¢vez¡¯s condition, and he did so until Monday¡¯s interview with the television network that was founded by Ch¨¢vez. The Ecuadorian president¡¯s recollection of what happened in early December greatly contrasts with the Venezuelan government¡¯s own version that Ch¨¢vez was fully recovering in Havana and was governing the country from his hospital bed in the weeks leading to his death.
It also adds to an early version of Ch¨¢vez¡¯s last days offered by the head of his presidential guard and a close confident, Jos¨¦ Ornella, who told AP two days after the Venezuelan leader¡¯s death that he could hardly speak and only moved his lips. ¡°I don¡¯t want to die, please don¡¯t let me die,¡± Ornella said that Ch¨¢vez told him.
Recently, in an interview with Spanish language channel of CNN, Venezuelan Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said that Ch¨¢vez came up with a way to communicate with his family and after sending a message to the Venezuelan people on February 18 on his Twitter account, he could not communicate further.
These small recollections question the optimism that Venezuelan government officials had at the time. President Nicol¨¢s Maduro, then Ch¨¢vez¡¯s vice president, said weeks before Ch¨¢vez died that he had met with the Venezuelan leader for five hours straight to receive instructions.
?On Christmas Day last year, Maduro told the nation that Ch¨¢vez was walking and performing exercises as part of his recovery, and was sharing the holidays with his family.
¡°He told me to eat just a half of a hallaca,¡± joked then the burly Maduro about a typical Christmas plate.
The Venezuelan government¡¯s strategy at the time was trying to demonstrate that Ch¨¢vez was mentally and physically capable of being sworn in for his third term on January 10, 2013 ¨C a ceremony that never took place.
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