The Venezuelan doctor who forecast President Hugo Chavez had two years left because of the aggressiveness of his pelvic cancer said on Friday he had left the country with his family after colleagues reported police visiting his consultancy.
Salvador Navarrete, who attended Chavez a decade ago and is in touch with some relatives and members of his medical team, caused uproar in Venezuela with comments last weekend that the president had a serious cancer -- sarcoma -- in the pelvis.
Chavez allies accused him of morbid motives and necrophilia. Then his version was directly contradicted by Chavez, who returned from tests in Cuba on Thursday declaring he was free of malignant cells.
Medical personnel say police visited Navarrete's office earlier this week at Caracas's Avila Clinic, checking files and computers, while the doctor was not present.
In an open letter published by local media, Navarrete said he wanted to show his face and have a public discussion about Chavez's health but had felt obliged to leave to an undisclosed location given the furore.
Events forced me to leave the country abruptly, something I neither wanted nor had planned to do, Navarrete wrote.
Chavez's health is the all-consuming issue for the 29 million people nation one year ahead of a presidential election where he wants to be re-elected.
In his letter, Navarrete said the interview with Mexico's Milenio Semanal magazine was intended to combat official secrecy over Chavez's condition.
I'm worried that the president and those around him do not know the full magnitude of his illness given it has been handled with complete secrecy he said.
The consequences of a fatal outcome, and the importance of informing both those who support him and those who oppose him, were the reasons that led me to tackle this delicate subject.
Chavez assurance he is fit and ready to begin his election campaign has met with scepticism from doctors, who say no cancer patient can be considered free from danger until at least two years after treatment.
Analysts, too, have seen an element of classic Chavez political theatre in his fanfare homecoming from medical tests in Cuba followed by an open-top caravan to a regional Catholic shrine where he prayed and gave thanks for his recovery.
Navarrete ratified his original prognosis of Chavez. His physical disappearance right now could be more traumatic than politicians realize, he added in the letter.
Salvador Navarrete, who once attended Chavez said he wanted an open debate on the leader’s health
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesA very wise move.
Oct 22nd, 2011 - 08:48 pm 0Chavez may have lived longer than his doctor and the doctor's family.
Is is very dangerous to disagree with Chavez when he declares there is no maligancy. What do doctors know, anyway?
How can he dare???
Oct 23rd, 2011 - 12:34 am 0Chavez assurance he is fit and ready to begin his election campaign has met with scepticism from doctors, who say no cancer patient can be considered free from danger until at least two years after treatment. - Having lost two family members due to cancer, I can agree with the doctors.
Oct 23rd, 2011 - 09:42 pm 0Commenting for this story is now closed.
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