Chavez faces toughest vote in 14 years tomorrow

Updated 06 October 2012
Follow

Chavez faces toughest vote in 14 years tomorrow

CARACAS, Venezuela: Thursday was not a good day to try to get any public business done in Venezuela’s capital.
State employees quit their offices by the tens of thousands, joining the red-shirted throngs that filled Caracas’s center for the final pre-election rally for President Hugo Chavez.
Chavez’s opponent in tomorrow’s election, Henrique Capriles, and his supporters accused the government of handing out red shirts to public employees and compelling them to participate.
People converged on Caracas by bus from all corners of Venezuela for Thursday’s street party. People barbecued on sidewalks, danced to music played on various stages and downed beer before a deluge drenched everyone, including Chavez.
The crowd numbered several hundred thousand, topping the turnout the previous Sunday for Capriles’ final rally in Caracas.
One Chavez supporter said he arrived for Thursday’s event on a bus from Maracaibo chartered by that city’s pro-Chavez mayor. Luis Eduardo Bolivar said he was grateful to Chavez for giving him a house, a wheelchair for one of his relatives and his pension.
President Chavez faces the toughest election of his 14-year rule tomorrow in a vote pitting his charisma and oil-financed largesse against fresh-faced challenger Henrique Capriles’ promise of jobs, safer streets and an end to cronyism.
Chavez, 58, staged a remarkable comeback from cancer this year and wants a new six-year term to consolidate his self-styled socialist revolution in the OPEC nation.
Capriles, a boyish 40-year-old state governor, has run a marathon eight-month campaign of house-by-house visits that have galvanized the historically fractured opposition and set up its best shot at the presidency since Chavez’s election in 1998.
Defeat for Chavez would defenestrate Latin America’s leader of anti-US sentiment while potentially boosting oil companies’ access to the world’s largest crude reserves.
Victory would allow Chavez to continue a wave of nationalizations and consolidate control over the economy, though a recurrence of his cancer would weaken his leadership and possibly give the opposition another chance.
In torrential rain, red-shirted supporters of the president filled much of downtown Caracas on Thursday for his final rally.
“Chavez will not fail the Venezuelan people,” the president said, soaked to the skin in a dark raincoat, on a stage before a sea of fans. “You know that my loyalty to the people almost brought me to the point of death. This is my path.”
For nearly a decade, he has won over voters with free health clinics, subsidized groceries and new universities.
Over the last year he launched programs to give pensions to the elderly, stipends to poor mothers, and tens of thousands of new homes were handed over on live TV to tearful supporters.
Everywhere Chavez has gone on the campaign trail, supplicants have shouted to him asking for help getting a home or a job, or thrust hand-written letters at his staff.
“I work for the state and I’m offended that the loser (Capriles) says we’re made to attend and made to wear red!” said Paulo Garralaga, at Thursday’s giant rally in Caracas. “I came to support Chavez and to tell him I’m going to vote for him.”
Yet, nationalizations have weakened private enterprise and given party apparatchiks growing control over jobs. Weak law enforcement, dysfunctional courts and plentiful arms have made Venezuela more violent than some war-zones. Frequent blackouts are an annoying reminder of squandered oil income.
“Each one of you should make a list of the problems that you have, and ask yourself, how many of those problems has this famous revolution solved for you?” the wiry and sports-loving Capriles intoned at one of his final rallies.

 


Winter pierces Kyiv homes after Russia knocks out heat

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Winter pierces Kyiv homes after Russia knocks out heat

  • The war’s fourth winter could be the coldest and darkest yet
  • On Saturday, Kyiv’s heat, power and water, hit hard by a strike two nights earlier, were shut down again

KYIV: Kyiv residents huddled against bitter winter cold inside their unheated apartments on Saturday as engineers struggled to restore power, water and heat knocked out in the latest salvo of Russian strikes.
Russia has regularly conducted intense bombardments of Ukraine’s energy system since it invaded its neighbor in 2022.
The war’s fourth winter could be the coldest and darkest yet, with the accumulated damage to the grid bringing utilities to the brink, and temperatures already below minus 10 degrees Celsius (14 F) and set to plunge further this week.
On Saturday, Kyiv’s heat, power and water, hit hard by a strike two nights earlier, were shut down again as engineers tried to repair the ruined power grid.
Galina Turchin, a 71-year-old pensioner living on Kyiv’s badly affected eastern ⁠bank, had a window covered by plastic sheeting after it was blown out when drone debris hit another part of her building during the last overnight attack.
She said she had not cooked food for two days, eating whatever had been left in their kitchen before the power, water and heat went out, and would now try to cook on a gas camping stove.
“We hope they will give us heat. If not power, then at least ⁠heat,” she said, standing wrapped in layers of jumpers in her kitchen.
The city administration said around noon local time (1000 GMT) on Saturday that the state grid operator Ukrenergo had ordered the city’s power system to be shut down, and that the water and heating systems, as well as electrified public transport, would also stop working as a result.
Less than an hour later, Ukrenergo said engineers had managed to remedy the immediate issue, which had been caused by damage from previous Russian strikes, and that power was coming back online in parts of Kyiv.
Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said the heating system, which in Ukrainian cities is centralized and pumps hot water to homes in pipes, was ⁠also coming back on, and that she expected heat supply to be fully restored on Saturday.
However, she said that the power situation in the capital was still difficult, as the grid was badly damaged and people were using more electric heaters because of the cold.
On Friday, with about half of Kyiv’s apartment blocks left without heating after the latest Russian missile and drone attack, Mayor Vitali Klitschko urged residents who had a warm place to go to temporarily leave the city.
Turchin, the pensioner in her cold apartment, said she had a village cottage in another region but it was unheated and would take three days to warm up with logs.
“The neighbor wrote. She said it was already minus 17 (Celsius) there last night.”