Hugo Chavez

Chavez cuts back newspaper column after referendum win

Chavez cuts back newspaper column after referendum win Caracas - The newspaper column that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has been writing three times a week will now appear just once a week, the government said Tuesday.

On Sunday, a Chavez-sponsored proposal to remove term limits on the mandates of the president and other elected officials was passed in a referendum.

Venezuelan opposition warns Chavez his victory was "no landslide"

Venezuelan opposition warns Chavez his victory was "no landslide"Caracas  - Venezuela's opposition leaders on Monday warned President Hugo Chavez that the referendum victory that removed term limits on his re-election "was no landslide," and he would need to seek greater consensus to remain in power.

Opposition leaders noted that 6 million Venezuelans, or 54 per cent of voters, favoured a proposal that allows the president unlimited re-election bids, while 5 million (46 per cent) voted against it and 32 per cent of those registered to cast their ballot, abstained.

Polls close in referendum on Chavez's "political fate"

Polls close in referendum on Chavez's "political fate"Caracas - Polls closed without major incidents in Sunday's constitutional referendum in Venezuela, in which nearly 17 million citizens voted on whether to allow the unlimited re-election of the country's president.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said the election was decisive for his own political future.

Referendum for unlimited Chavez terms begins in Venezuela

President Hugo ChavezCaracas  - Polls opened on Sunday morning across Venezuela in a new referendum on the issue of unlimited terms for President Hugo Chavez, amid heavy security measures.

Around 17 million Venezuelans are eligible to vote in the referendum, which will decide on a change to the country's constitution that would see Chavez extend his period in office beyond the currently-mandated two terms, due to end in 2013.

A further term would see Chavez, who has been in power in Venezuela since 1999, in power until at least 2019.

The result of the poll is should be known by the early hours of Monday.

Chavez faces ballot box without past aura of invincibility

Chavez faces ballot box without past aura of invincibilityBuenos Aires  - Venezuelans are set to go to the polls again Sunday, but this time at least one thing is different: precedent shows that President Hugo Chavez can actually lose an election, and accept defeat too.

"If we lose, we lose," Chavez said bluntly in an interview with CNN earlier this month.

Venezuelans are set to vote on a constitutional amendment that would allow the unlimited re-election of the president. The proposal was already part of a broader constitutional reform that was rejected at the polls in December 2007.

Hugo Chavez: Ten years in power as an international maverick

Hugo Chavez: Ten years in power as an international maverickBuenos Aires  - Controversial Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez will celebrate ten years in power on Monday and has made it clear that he has no plans to leave anytime soon.

Chavez became president on February 2, 1999. On February 15, Venezuela is to hold a constitutional referendum, which would abolish term limits and enable Chavez to seek unlimited re-elections.

Under the present constitution, Chavez's second term ends in February 2013 without the chance of re-election.

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