
-
Barca battle back at Valladolid to preserve Liga title charge
-
'Like a dream' says dominant Sabalenka after third Madrid title
-
Napoli move step closer to Serie A crown after win at fiery Lecce
-
Williams beats Trump to set up World Snooker final with Zhao Xintong
-
Eurovision limbers up with over-60s disco
-
'Surreal' Freeman hat-trick stuns Leinster to take Northampton into Champions Cup final
-
Huge crowds head to Copacabana for free Lady Gaga concert
-
Warren Buffett: billionaire investor with simple tastes
-
Serbian president out of hospital after cutting short US trip
-
Arsenal rocked by Bournemouth, Villa boost top five bid
-
Freeman hat-trick stuns Leinster to take Northampton into Champions Cup final
-
Warren Buffett says will retire from Berkshire Hathaway by year's end
-
Al Ahli beat Kawasaki Frontale to win Asian Champions League
-
Shepherd, Dayal edge Bengaluru past Chennai in IPL thriller
-
Sabalenka beats Gauff to win third Madrid Open crown
-
Arsenal suffer Bournemouth defeat ahead of PSG showdown
-
Napoli six clear in Serie A after win at fiery Lecce
-
Van Nistelrooy glad as Leicester end goal drought against sorry Saints
-
Meta fighting Nigerian fines, warns could shut Facebook, Instagram
-
Hamas armed wing releases video of apparently injured Israeli hostage
-
Norris wins wild and wet Miami GP sprint race
-
Gabon ex-junta chief Oligui sworn in after election win
-
Singapore ruling party wins election in landslide
-
Eurovision warms up with over-60s disco
-
Russell helps Bath beat Edinburgh in Challenge Cup semi-final
-
Second-string PSG beaten by Strasbourg before Arsenal return leg
-
Zelensky says won't play Putin 'games' with short truce
-
Norris wins Miami GP sprint race
-
PM of Yemen government announces resignation
-
South Africa bowler Rabada serving ban for positive drug test
-
Serbian president stable in hospital after cutting short US trip
-
UN envoy urges Israel to halt Syria attacks 'at once'
-
Villa boost top five bid, Southampton beaten at Leicester
-
Leipzig put Bayern and Kane's title party on ice
-
Serbian president hospitalised after cutting short US trip
-
Buick and Appleby rule again in English 2000 Guineas
-
Singapore ruling party headed for clear victory in test for new PM
-
Martinez climbs into Tour de Romandie lead with penultimate stage win
-
O'Sullivan backs Zhao Xintong to become snooker 'megastar'
-
Simbine wins 100m in photo finish thriller as Duplantis dominates
-
Atletico held at Alaves in dry Liga draw
-
Cardinals meet ahead of vote for new pope
-
Snooker star Zhao: from ban to cusp of Chinese sporting history
-
Tielemans keeps Villa in chase for Champions League place
-
Anthony Albanese: Australia's dog-loving, Tory fighting PM
-
Trump may have aided Australian PM's election victory: analysts
-
Right-leaning Australian opposition leader loses election, and seat
-
India blocks Pakistani celebrities on social media
-
Ancelotti says he will reveal future plans at end of season
-
India-Pakistan tensions hit tourism in Kashmiri valley

Chavez legacy looms large, and divides Venezuela, 25 years on
"Chavez lives, damn it!" a soldier cries out every day at the same time outside the tomb of Venezuela's late leftist leader Hugo Chavez, who remains omnipresent and divisive 25 years after he took power.
The charismatic revolutionary, who became the symbolic leader of the left in Latin America, died in 2013, but his "Chavismo" political movement lives on under his anointed heir Nicolas Maduro, who is mired in political and economic crisis.
"Chavismo has been a real tragedy for the country," said Benigno Alarcon, a political scientist at the Andres Bello Catholic University.
Chavez is hailed for championing the poor. He used the country's oil wealth to develop social programs which earned him their devotion, but was criticized for his authoritarian style and failure to diversify the economy.
However, a quarter of a century after he took power, Venezuela's economy is on its knees, and some seven million of the country's 30 million citizens have fled the country.
Gross domestic product has shrunk 80 percent in the past decade, and hyperinflation forced the government to dollarize the economy.
Oil production has been devastated since the glory days of three million barrels a day, which fell to 300,000 before recovering to 900,000.
"Money has been wasted on cronyism. There has been no investment in what is important for a country to progress," said Alarcon.
He accused Chavismo of having "killed the goose that laid the golden eggs", in reference to state oil giant PDVSA.
Alarcon said bad management, such as the replacement of thousands of executives with "people who know little about oil," lack of investment, corruption and use of company resources for public spending drove PDVSA into ruin.
"Venezuela has one of the highest poverty rates in Latin America," soaring to over 90 percent between 2018 and 2021 before dropping to 81.5 percent in 2022, according to a UCAB survey.
- Maduro's 'great excuse' -
Rodrigo Cabezas, who was finance minister under Chavez, defends the late socialist, blaming the country's downward spiral on his successor Maduro, who blames Venezuela's woes on US sanctions.
He said Maduro was using confrontation with the United States as a "great excuse... to justify his immense incompetence in managing the country, the economy, and his terribly authoritarian drift and violations of human rights."
Chavez too demonized the United States, embracing its enemies, and portraying it as an evil colonial power.
"The success of Chavez, who had placed... the fight against poverty at the center of public management, has disappeared in a socially destroyed country," said Cabezas.
"No one can say that the economy was destroyed under Chavez," he said, adding that the economy grew between 2004 and 2012 and poverty levels at one point hit 27 percent.
Chavez represented "hope for change," said Cabezas.
For his part, Alarcon highlighted "human rights violations which began under Chavez," from the crackdown after a failed coup against him in 2002 to a student protest movement of 2007.
The International Criminal Court has opened an investigation into the repression of protests in 2017 which left around a hundred dead.
The country is also regularly accused of extrajudicial killings, torture and arbitrary arrests.
- 'Right side of history' -
Under Chavez, presidential term limits were scrapped, allowing him to be elected three times, while Maduro is now seeking a third term in 2024.
Maduro has blocked his main opposition rival Maria Corina Machado from the election race, is engaged in a new sanctions battle with the United States, and has rattled his saber in a territorial dispute with neighboring Guyana.
Meanwhile, Chavez's personality cult has not diminished, his image is splashed onto walls, and his name appears in Maduro's speeches, on television shows and elsewhere.
At the Caracas Mountain Barracks, foreign and local visitors flock to his mausoleum which is also a museum where his entire life is on display, from photos of his youth to personal objects such as a baseball outfit, uniforms and weapons.
His tomb is guarded by four motionless guards, dressed in red and with sabers in hand, who are relieved every two hours in a martial ceremony. Before a sad trumpet blast, each of the soldiers recites a part of Chavez's life.
At 16:25 every day a soldier shouts out: "Chavez lives, damn it!"
"Chavez lives every time we see a child in a free school. Chavez lives when we go to a neighborhood... and people have social rights. When we as a people have patriotic pride," said Ana Sofia Cabezas, Chavez Foundation vice president.
"The people woke up with Chavez and never slept again," she said. "We are on the right side of history."
Y.Aukaiv--AMWN