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Chavez muses on US Latin America cancer plot | Chavez muses on US Latin America cancer plot |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has questioned whether the US has developed a secret technology to give cancer to left-wing leaders in Latin America. | Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has questioned whether the US has developed a secret technology to give cancer to left-wing leaders in Latin America. |
Treated for cancer this year, Mr Chavez was speaking a day after news that Argentina's president had the disease. | Treated for cancer this year, Mr Chavez was speaking a day after news that Argentina's president had the disease. |
Fernando Lugo of Paraguay, Dilma Rousseff of Brazil and her predecessor Lula have also had cancer. | |
Mr Chavez said this was "very strange" but stressed that he was thinking aloud rather than making "rash accusations". | Mr Chavez said this was "very strange" but stressed that he was thinking aloud rather than making "rash accusations". |
But he said the instances of cancer among Latin American leaders were "difficult to explain using the law of probabilities". | But he said the instances of cancer among Latin American leaders were "difficult to explain using the law of probabilities". |
"Would it be strange if they had developed the technology to induce cancer and nobody knew about it?" Mr Chavez asked in a televised speech to soldiers at an army base. | "Would it be strange if they had developed the technology to induce cancer and nobody knew about it?" Mr Chavez asked in a televised speech to soldiers at an army base. |
Who next? | Who next? |
Mr Chavez noted that US government scientists had infected Guatemalan prisoners with syphilis and other diseases in the 1940s, but that this had only come to light last year. | Mr Chavez noted that US government scientists had infected Guatemalan prisoners with syphilis and other diseases in the 1940s, but that this had only come to light last year. |
And he joked that he would now take extra care of the presidents of Bolivia and Ecuador - Evo Morales and Rafael Correa - lest they also be diagnosed with cancer. | And he joked that he would now take extra care of the presidents of Bolivia and Ecuador - Evo Morales and Rafael Correa - lest they also be diagnosed with cancer. |
The Venezuelan leader, who is 57, has often accused the US of plotting to overthrow or even kill him. | The Venezuelan leader, who is 57, has often accused the US of plotting to overthrow or even kill him. |
He says he is now free of cancer after having surgery and chemotherapy in Cuba earlier this year. | He says he is now free of cancer after having surgery and chemotherapy in Cuba earlier this year. |
The exact details of his illness have not been made public, fuelling speculation that his condition may be worse than he has let on. | The exact details of his illness have not been made public, fuelling speculation that his condition may be worse than he has let on. |
Mr Chavez was the first regional leader to offer support to the Argentine President, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, after it was announced on Tuesday that she had thyroid cancer. | Mr Chavez was the first regional leader to offer support to the Argentine President, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, after it was announced on Tuesday that she had thyroid cancer. |
"We will live and we will conquer!" he told her. | "We will live and we will conquer!" he told her. |
Ms Fernandez, 58, is due to have an operation on 4 January, but doctors say her prognosis is very good. | Ms Fernandez, 58, is due to have an operation on 4 January, but doctors say her prognosis is very good. |
Survivors' summit | Survivors' summit |
Doctors treating former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva for throat cancer say the 66-year-old is responding well to chemotherapy and should make a full recovery. | Doctors treating former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva for throat cancer say the 66-year-old is responding well to chemotherapy and should make a full recovery. |
Dilma Rousseff, 64 - who took over from Lula as Brazilian president a year ago - is fully recovered after receiving treatment for lymphoma cancer in 2009. | Dilma Rousseff, 64 - who took over from Lula as Brazilian president a year ago - is fully recovered after receiving treatment for lymphoma cancer in 2009. |
Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo, 60, was diagnosed with lymphoma in August 2010 but is now in remission after chemotherapy. | Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo, 60, was diagnosed with lymphoma in August 2010 but is now in remission after chemotherapy. |
Lula and Mr Chavez have previously joked that they would hold a summit of Latin American leaders who had beaten cancer. | Lula and Mr Chavez have previously joked that they would hold a summit of Latin American leaders who had beaten cancer. |
Ms Fernandez has now said that she will insist on being the "honorary president" of the summit of cancer survivors. | Ms Fernandez has now said that she will insist on being the "honorary president" of the summit of cancer survivors. |
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