|      CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Some in anguish, some in fear, Venezuelans raced for home and stocked up on food and    water Tuesday after the government announced    the death of President Hugo Chavez, the    larger-than-life firebrand socialist who led the nation for 14 years. Vice President Nicolas Maduro's voice broke and tears ran down his    face as he appeared on national television to announce that Chavez died at    4:25 p.m. local time (3:55 p.m. EST, 1755 GMT) "after battling hard    against an illness over nearly two years." He did not say what    exactly killed Chavez, although the government had announced the previous    night that a severe new respiratory infection had severely weakened him. A few hours later,    Foreign Minister Elias Jaua affirmed one of    Chavez's final wishes: Maduro would be interim president and then be the    ruling party's candidate to carry on Chavez's populist "revolution"    in elections to be called within 30 days. It was a day fraught with    mixed signals, some foreboding and some violent. Just a few hours before    announcing Chavez's death, Maduro made a virulent speech against enemies he    claimed were trying to undermine Venezuelan democracy. And he said two U.S.    military attaches had been expelled for trying to destabilize the nation. In announcing the death    of the former army paratrooper who wielded Venezuela's oil wealth to benefit    the poor and win friends regionally, Maduro shifted tone. He called on Venezuelans    to be "dignified heirs of the giant man" Chavez was. "Let there be no    weakness, no violence. Let there be no hate. In our hearts there should only    be one sentiment: Love. Love, peace and discipline." The government declared 7    days of mourning and closed all schools and universities until next Monday. All across downtown    Caracas, shops and restaurants begin closing and Venezuelans hustled for    home, some even breaking into a run. Many had looks of anguish    and incredulity on their faces. "I feel a sorrow so    big I can't speak," said Yamilina Barrios, a 39-year-old clerk who works    in the Industry Ministry, her face covered in tears. "He was the best    this country had." "I hope the country    calms down and continues the work that he left us, continues in unity and the    progress continues," Barrios said. Among the nervous was    Maria Elena Lovera, a 45-year-old housewife. "I want to go home. People    are crazy and are way too upset." There were several    incidents of political violence, In one, a group of    masked, helmeted men on motorcycles, some brandishing revolvers, attacked    about 40 students who had been protesting for more than a week near the    Supreme Court building to demand the government give more information about    Chavez's health. The attackers, who didn't    wear clothing identifying any political allegiance, burned the students'    tents and scattered their food just minutes after the death was announced. "They burned    everything we had," said student leader Gaby Arellano. She said she saw    four of the attackers with pistols but none fired a shot. Outside the military    hospital where Chavez's remains were visited by loved ones and confederates,    an angry crowd attacked a Colombian TV reporter. "They beat us with    helmets, with sticks, men, women, adults," Carmen Andrea Rengifo said on    RCN TV. Video images showed her bleeding above the forehead but she was not    seriously injured. Maduro and other    government officials have recently railed against international media, not    RCN, however, for allegedly reporting rumors about Chavez's health. After nightfall, several    hundred people gathered at Bolivar Square, a symbolic place for Chavistas    because it has huge nine-meter-tall (30-foot-tall) statue of Simon Bolivar,    the 19th century independence hero who Chavez claimed as his chief    inspiration. Some arrived singing    Venezuela's national anthem and holding up posters of Chavez. Many chanted    "I am Chavez," which had been a campaign slogan of the president. One man began shouting    through a megaphone a warning to the opposition: "They won't    return." The crowd then joined in, chanting: "They won't return." Maduro, who had urged    people to meet at the square, called on the opposition to respect "the    people's pain." "Those who never    supported the comandante Hugo Chavez, respect the pain of the people. This is    the moment to think of our families, of our country." Chavez leaves behind a    political movement firmly in control of the nation, but with some doubt about    how a new leadership will be formed. Chavez's illness    prevented him from taking the oath of office after he was re-elected to a new    term on Oct. 7 and the constitution says the speaker of the National    Assembly, Diosdado Cabello, should take over as interim president under such    circumstances. But Jaua said Maduro    would assume the rule as that was Chavez's will. The man Chavez defeated    in October, the youthful Miranda state Gov. Henrique    Capriles, is widely expected to represent the opposition. Venezuela's defense    minister appeared on television to announce that the military will remain    loyal to the constitution in the wake of Chavez's death. Adm. Diego Molero    appealed for "unity, tranquility and understanding" among    Venezuelans. The announcement of    Chavez's death stunned Venezuelans, if it did not surprise them. Earlier in the day,    Maduro was more belligerent in tone as he announced the government had    expelled two U.S. diplomats from the country and said "we have no    doubt" that Chavez's cancer, which was first diagnosed in June 2011, was    induced by "the historical enemies of our homeland." He compared the situation    to the death of the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, claiming Arafat was    "inoculated with an illness." Chavez's inner circle has    long claimed the United States was behind a failed 2002 attempt to overthrow    him, and he has frequently played the anti-American card to stir up support.    Venezuela has been without a U.S. ambassador since July 2010 and expelled another    U.S. military officer in 2006. U.S. State Department    spokesman Patrick Ventrell rejected the assertion that the U.S. was trying to    destabilize Venezuela and said it "leads us to conclude that,    unfortunately, the current Venezuelan government is not interested in and    improved relationship." Maduro has been taking on    a larger role since Chavez urged Venezuelans to choose him as president    before disappearing in early December to undergo a fourth round of cancer    surgery in Cuba. He accused U.S. Embassy    Air Force attache Col. David Delmonaco of    spying on Venezuela's military and seeking to    involve officers in "destabilizing projects." Maduro gave Delmonaco    24 hours to leave, and U.S. officials said he had already left the country. Maduro said Tuesday that    the government was "on the trail of other elements that figure in this    entire venomous scenario and are seeking to stir up trouble." Later Tuesday, Jaua said    a second U.S. Air Force attaché was being expelled, also for alleged    espionage. The Pentagon said the officer, Devlin Costal, was already in the    United States. "Let's remember that    active participation of the United States in the fascist coup of 2002,"    Jaua said. Chavez has run Venezuela    for more than 14 years as a virtual one-man show, gradually placing all state    institutions under his personal control. But the former army paratroop    commander, who rose to fame by launching a failed 1992 coup, never groomed a    successor with his same kind of force of personality. The campaign for the    upcoming election to replace him, though undeclared, has nevertheless already    begun. Maduro has frequently commandeered all broadcast channels,    Chavez-style, to tout the "revolution" and vilify the opposition. Maduro on Tuesday    repeated government claims that Capriles met in the United States over the    weekend with right-wing U.S. conspirators and was planning to meet over the    weekend with Roberta Jacobsen, assistant U.S. secretary of state for the    hemisphere. One personality on state    TV also accused the Capriles family of buying a New York City apartment with    stolen funds. Capriles responded via    Twitter Tuesday by calling Maduro a liar. "Lie after lie in    every speech," he said. Chavez, long famed for    his marathon appearances at televised events, had neither been seen nor heard    from, except for photos released in mid-February, since submitting to a    fourth round of surgery in Cuba on Dec. 11 for an unspecified cancer in the    pelvic area. It was first diagnosed in June 2011. The government said    Chavez returned home on Feb. 18 and was confined to the military hospital    since. Maduro said last week    that the president had begun receiving chemotherapy around the end of    January. ___ Associated Press writers    Christopher Toothaker in Caracas, Vivian Sequera in Bogota, Colombia, and    Robert Burns and Luis Alonso in Washington contributed to this report.  |    
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