Venezuela's Maduro sworn in as president, calls for dialogue
CARACAS - Agence France-Presse
Wearing the presidential sash, Venezuela's newly sworn-in President Nicolas Maduro raises his fist before delivering his inaugural speech at the National Assembly during his swearing-in ceremony in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, April 19. AP photo
Nicolas Maduro was sworn in as president of Venezuela on April 19, replacing the late Hugo Chavez with a call for dialogue with the opposition to build a better country "for everyone, by everyone." To cheers in the National Assembly, Maduro dedicated his oath of office to "the eternal memory of the supreme commander" Chavez, who dominated this oil-rich South American country for 14 years until his death of cancer in March.Maduro, 50, said he wanted to begin his presidency "with a call to all Venezuelan men and women to continue to build a better fatherland of peace, an inclusive fatherland for everyone, by everyone." Speaking of the opposition, he said, "I call on them to converse in the different settings where conversations can be held. I am ready to converse even with the devil." But the new president also resumed attacks on the opposition, highlighting what has been a week of soaring political tensions since he was declared the winner of Sunday's snap elections by a narrow margin of 1.8 percentage points.
His speech was briefly disrupted when a man in a red shirt rushed onto the stage and roughly pushed Maduro aside to grab the microphone.
National television coverage of the event was suspended, causing momentary confusion until it eturned minutes later after Maduro had regained his composure and the intruder had been removed from the stage. "Incident overcome," said Maduro, shaking it off.
Watching the ceremony was a packed assembly with foreign leaders, lawmakers and other dignitaries in attendance.
Close allies Presidents Raul Castro of Cuba and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran were in the audience, along with the presidents of Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia and neighboring Colombia.
Votes to be recounted
Maduro had met the night before in Lima with regional leaders who extended their congratulations to the new government and urged all sides in the bitterly contested elections to accept "the official results." The endorsement came just hours after Venezuelan election authorities announced they would conduct an expanded audit of Sunday's election returns in response to opposition demands for a full recount.
Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles immediately accepted, congratulating his followers on their "struggle for the truth." Violent post-election protests left eight people dead and dozens hurt, igniting a crisis as Maduro and Capriles traded fiery accusations over who was to blame.
For Maduro, the election was the culmination of a political career that took him from one-time bus driver and union organizer to Chavez's handpicked choice to succeed him as president.
"I am the first post-Chavez president in history," Maduro said on the eve of his swearing-in. The new first lady, Cilia Flores, is a heavyweight in her own right in the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela.
But Maduro also lost the votes of hundreds of thousands of Chavez supporters to Capriles, a 40-year-old state governor who lost to the comandante in October by an 11-point margin.
The weak performance suggested Maduro has yet to step out of Chavez's giant shadow with a mandate of his own.
Lacking in Chavez's magnetism, Maduro nonetheless has taken on major political responsibilities before, serving as speaker of the national assembly, then as foreign minister, and finally as vice president, when Chavez selected him as his hand-picked successor.