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Chavez wins another term in Venezuela
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has been re-elected to another six-year term.
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Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez shrugged off cancer and a unified opposition to triumph yet again at the ballot box and claim another six-year mandate to pursue his oil-funded socialist revolution.
Sunday proved a sterner test than previous elections in Chavez's 14-year tenure, but the bombastic anti-American leftist emerged victorious again despite health scares, growing discontent and a strong opposition challenge.
With nearly all the votes counted, Chavez had 7,731,972, or 54.66 per cent, compared to 6,327,429, or 44.73 per cent, for his youthful opponent, former Miranda state governor Henrique Capriles.
Addressing thousands of cheering supporters from the balcony of his Miraflores presidential residence, Chavez sang the national anthem and vowed to be a better president.
"Viva Venezuela! Viva the fatherland!" exulted the leftist leader. "The battle was perfect and the victory was perfect."
"I want to include everybody, including sectors of the opposition," the 58-year-old Chavez, wearing his trademark red shirt, said in a tacit acceptance of the best electoral showing against him yet.
But, brandishing the sword of his 19th century idol, independence hero Simon Bolivar, he pledged to press ahead with a socialist revolution that has antagonised opponents, both at home and abroad.
"Venezuela will continue its march toward the democratic socialism of the 21st century," he said.
Chavez declared himself free of cancer in July and intensified his campaign this past week, holding rallies across the country, even dancing and singing in the rain before hundreds of thousands of supporters on Thursday.
In his victory speech, he alluded only briefly to his cancer battle.
"Today was a memorable day," he said.
"I thank God and ask him life and health to keep serving the Venezuelan people."
Chavez's rival, 40-year-old Capriles, was gracious in defeat, saying: "I accept and respect the decision of the people."
But it was a bitter pill for many in the divided country to swallow. Some 200 Capriles supporters, many in tears and disbelief, massed outside his campaign headquarters.
"I am disappointed, devastated," said Daniela Torrealba, 33.
Chavez's victory meant six more years of "uncertainty and stagnation", he said.
Election experts said the electronic voting system was reliable, but suspicions ran high that whoever lost would not concede defeat.
Capriles appeared to put those fears to rest, accepting the result in good faith after an earlier call for calm.
"To know how to win, you have to know how to lose," he said at his campaign headquarters.
"For me, what the people say is sacred."
The fate of Chavez, a fierce US critic and the leading voice of Latin America's left, was closely watched by communist ally Cuba, which heavily depends on Venezuela's oil, and other regional partners.
"Viva Venezuela, viva the great fatherland, viva the Bolivarian Revolution!" leftist Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa tweeted, in words echoed by Bolivian leader Evo Morales and Argentina's Cristina Kirchner.
But in Washington, the head of the House Foreign Relations Committee, Republican politician Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, accused Chavez of manipulating the result.
"Chavez must not be allowed to continue to export his hate and despotism abroad like his fellow dictators in Iran and Cuba through the oppression of the press and violation of human rights," she said.
Capriles had surged in opinion polls during the campaign as he attracted huge rallies with promises to curb runaway crime and unite the polarised South American country.
Weakened by his bout with cancer, Chavez stepped up campaigning in the last week of the race, warning that Capriles would undo his popular social "missions" for the poor.
Sitting on the world's biggest proven crude oil deposits, Chavez has used petro-dollars to build a network of regional allies and secure the loyalty of poor Venezuelans dependent on the generosity of his social programs.
The opposition had accused Chavez of misusing public funds for his campaign and dominating the airwaves while forcing government workers to attend rallies through intimidation.
Capriles had hammered the president over the country's regular power outages, food shortages and runaway murder rate, which has risen to 50 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.
The indefatigable Chavez rose to prominence in 1992 when he led a failed coup against then-president Carlos Andres Perez.
On leaving prison two years later he embarked on a political career, peppering rousing speeches with Biblical quotes and from Bolivar.
Elected Venezuela's youngest president in 1998, at the age of just 44, Chavez set about reforming the constitution and reducing the powers of Congress, easily winning the ensuing 2000 election.
Despite consolidating power, redistributing land and nationalising the PDVSA oil behemoth to foster his social programs, the economy was in turmoil and Chavez was briefly ousted in a 2002 coup by business leaders.
Popular protests saw him reinstated two days later.
A 2004 attempt by the opposition to oust Chavez in a recall referendum was defeated by popular vote.
Elected to a second six-year term in 2006, Chavez then won a 2009 referendum that abolished the two-term limit and enabled him to run indefinitely.
If he lasts until the end of this term, Chavez will have served 20 years as Venezuelan leader.
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