Chavez returns to Venezuela from Cuba after surgery

CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez flew home on Friday after cancer surgery in Cuba that will require him to have radiation therapy ahead of October’s re-election bid.

Chavez’s presence on Venezuelan soil after an absence of more than three weeks in Havana should reassert his leadership, calm anxiety among supporters and quell whispers of a brewing succession struggle behind the scenes.

Yet little is known about what kind of cancer Chavez has or how serious it is. So big questions remain as to whether he is fit enough to campaign for an October 7 election that has turned into the biggest political fight of his 13-year rule.

In a sign that the socialist leader was looking healthy enough to appear in public, officials called press photographers and cameramen to Maiquetia international airport, on the coast outside Caracas, to witness Chavez’s arrival.

“We’re taking off right now from Jose Marti International Airport, heading south, heading to the fatherland!” Chavez, 57, said via Twitter prior to the roughly two-hour flight.

In news that stunned Venezuelans accustomed to Chavez’s energetic and all-dominant presence, Cuban doctors treated a pelvic abscess and removed a cancerous tumor in June 2011.

Following those procedures, Chavez said he was “completely recovered.” But after a recurrence of the disease that dented his credibility regarding his health, Chavez flew to Cuba last month to have a second malignant tumor removed.

Upbeat as always, Chavez fired off a series of Tweets before he departed on Friday, saying he had bid farewell to his friend and political mentor Fidel Castro, the former Cuban leader.

“We had lunch with Fidel. He sent a gigantic hug to the whole Venezuelan people,” Chavez said.

“We will live and we will conquer!” he added, in what has become his signature slogan since he was diagnosed with cancer.

GUESSING GAME

Medical experts say the radiation treatment he faces could take a heavy physical toll. Chavez has denied rumors the disease has spread.

The cancer saga has eclipsed all other matters in the South American country, with theories ranging from a belief by some that he has invented it to win sympathy, to speculation by others that he has only months to live.

Whatever his condition, the side effects of the radiation treatment will slow down Chavez’s traditionally gregarious, on-the-street style, just as his 39-year-old opponent, Henrique Capriles, is gearing up his own campaign.

Capriles, a former state governor, won a strong mandate in a primary election last month and is contrasting his energetic and youthful image with Chavez’s convalescence.

On the campaign trail this week, Capriles walked for hours under the sun, entered dozens of homes and shops to talk to Venezuelans, and enjoyed a game of basketball with locals.

“We are the new generation. We have energy and new ideas. We are the future, they are the past,” Capriles told Reuters.

Opinion polls show Chavez, in power since 1999, still has the edge over Capriles in voter enthusiasm, although roughly a third of the electorate is still undecided.

(Additional reporting by Deisy Buitrago, Marianna Parraga and Mario Naranjo; Editing by Stacey Joyce)

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