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Coup plots ruined marriage Venezuela's first lady says

Jan McGirk,Latin America Correspondent
Tuesday 11 June 2002 00:00 BST
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The former US president Jimmy Carter has been summoned to help promote talks between the Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, and the opposition amid rumours that the military will again try to unseat him. But the feisty leftist, who was overthrown for 30 hours in a coup in April, is also in need of mediation on the personal front. His wife has publicly demanded a divorce.

Marisabel Rodriguez de Chavez has complained in a newspaper interview that presidential power has altered her husband. After five years together, she claims their friends and surroundings have drastically changed and mutual attraction has declined to a "personality clash".

Mrs Chavez is also fed up with the incessant street marches by her husband's supporters and detractors which wind up outside Miraflores, the presidential palace. Not all end in bloodshed, as did the clash in April in which 17 people were killed and more than 100 were wounded, but the noise and the shouted insults grate on her nerves. "We've had to run away three times, practically with our possessions tied into a bundle and hanging from a stick," she said. "That isn't a life for anyone."

While her husband was held prisoner by dissident military officers, Mrs Chavez spread the word by mobile phone that the he had refused to sign a resignation. But her loyalty has its limits and now she wants out.

The plotline would stretch credulity even on a melodramatic Venezuelan soap opera, but both of Mr Chavez's marriages have foundered because of bungled coups d'état. When Mr Chavez failed to topple the government in 1992, the charismatic lieutenant colonel in the paratrooper's beret was jailed for two years, and all his family put under surveillance. On his release, Nancy Colmenares de Chavez, the mother of his first three children, confessed that she had fallen in love with her guard, and dumped the aspiring politician.

Love him or loathe him, Mr Chavez undeniably rouses passions. The shanty town masses adore his efforts to redistribute wealth. The opposition – an unlikely coalition of businessmen, clergy, and labour – wants to throw him out of office for mental health reasons: delusions of grandeur.

The military remains divided even after a purge of disloyal officers. Pedro Carmona, president for a day by courtesy of the junta, scuttled off to exile in Colombia last week.

But coup rumours are again circulating: whether President Chavez's rule lasts much longer than his second marriage remains to be seen.

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