You're reading: A funeral, and a swearing in, for Venezuela

ARACAS, Venezuela — With leaders from five continents on hand, Venezuela prepared for a day of distinctly different ceremonies — first the formal state funeral of Hugo Chavez, then the controversial swearing in of his anointed interim successor, who the opposition charges has no constitutional right to the job.

Friday’s funeral at the military academy where Chavez has
been lying in state promises to be a final turn on the world stage for
the former paratrooper after 14 tumultuous years at Venezuela’s helm,
though in some ways he is not going anywhere: Venezuela announced
Thursday that it would embalm Chavez’s body and put it on permanent
display.

Hours before the visiting dignitaries arrived,
Venezuelans in their hundreds of thousands were still filing past
Chavez’s glass-covered casket in a round-the-clock marathon of tears,
prayers and military salutes. The last of what the Venezuelan government
says are more than 30 heads of state arrived for the funeral early
Friday. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad touched down after 1 a.m.
and Chilean President Sebastian Pinera landed around dawn.

“It is a
great pain for us because we have lost a friend,” Ahmadinejad said upon
his arrival. “I feel like I have lost myself, but I am sure that he
still lives. Chavez will never die. His spirit and soul live on in each
of our hearts.”

U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks, a New York Democrat, and
former Rep. William Delahunt, a Democrat from Massachusetts, represented
the United States, which Chavez often portrayed as a great global evil
even as he sent the country billions of dollars in oil each year.

The
normally traffic-choked streets of Caracas were empty, with schools and
many businesses shuttered. The government also prohibited alcohol
sales. Many Venezuelans, particularly Chavez supporters, said they were
caught up in the pomp and circumstance of the past few days, and
flattered to be in the world’s attention.

“This is historic …I
have never seen anything like it,” said Edila Ojeda, a 57-year-old
janitor. “He was a world leader recognized internationally. I am
speechless. It is impressive.”

Others said they were put off by what they saw as excess, particularly the plan to put Chavez’s body on permanent display.

“He
was a president, and I would say not a good one. Not a hero,” said
Gloria Ocampos, a retired office manager. “He should be buried, just
like any other president. They are treating him like he was the father
of the country … It’s crazy.”

The government has given almost no
details about the funeral, and has told the national and international
media there will be no access, a measure of the strict control with
which Chavez and his top lieutenants have controlled the country for
years. On Thursday, Foreign Minister Elias Jaua appealed to local media
not to publish critical political analyses “which could be a provocation
for a pained people.”

Following the funeral, National Assembly
Speaker Diosdado Cabello was to swear in Vice President Nicolas Maduro
as interim president, as Chavez desired, despite complaints by the
opposition that Cabello is the rightful holder of that post under the
constitution.

Cabello announced that the swearing in will be held
at the same military academy complex where Chavez’s body is lying in
state. Normally, presidents in Venezuela are sworn in at the National
Assembly.

The constitution says elections must be held within 30
days of Chavez’s Mar. 5 death, though the government has not set a date.
Maduro has announced he will be the candidate of Chavez’s ruling
socialist party against likely opposition candidate Henrique Capriles,
and many expect him to ride the wave of emotion following Chavez’s death
to victory.

Friday’s funeral promises a climax to three days of
ceremony have followed Chavez’s death, and Venezuelan media were filled
with commentary about the outsized place the late leader held on the
world stage. Jaua said countries from Cuba to China to Iran had declared
days of national mourning for Chavez, highly unusual for the leader of
another country.

For many Chavez supporters, and the political
insiders he left behind, the task ahead will be continuing the
president’s political movement beyond his death.

Maduro announced
Thursday that the late president’s body will be embalmed and forever
displayed inside a glass tomb at a military museum not far from the
presidential palace from which he ruled. Analysts said the perpetual
display was meant to keep Chavez’s power structure alive, long after his
death at age 58.

“Nicolas Maduro and his government are building
an aura that makes it very difficult, I would say, that in the future,
the opposition tries to promote an alternative to the government,” said
Oscar Valles, a political analyst at the Metropolitan University in
Caracas.

Heart-broken supporters are clearly in favor of the effort.

“We
must think about the future and how we are going to guarantee the
continuity of the revolution,” said Rolando Tarazon, a street vendor who
was waiting with his wife to see Chavez’s body lying in state at the
military academy late Thursday.

Some lined up to see Chavez’s body early Friday mixed politics with emotion.

“Chavez, we swear to you, we’ll vote for Maduro!” they chanted.

Chavez
was particularly beloved by the poor, whose lot he championed. But
critics say he left his successors a monumental task, with inflation of
more than 20 percent a year, and public debt quadrupling to more than
$100 billion. Crime is endemic and Chavez’s chaotic management style has
been blamed for a breakdown in infrastructure, particularly in the key
oil industry.

Some Venezuelans worried whether the nation’s
anointed leaders are up to the task of governing. Others said they
wanted to learn when the election will be held.

“People are
beginning to get back to their lives. One must keep working,” said
40-year-old Caracas resident Laura Guerra, a Chavez supporter who said
she was not yet sold on Maduro. “I don’t think he will be the same. I
don’t think he has the same strength that the ‘comandante’ had.”