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mulberry bagsRafael Poleo, a Venezuelan columnist and political analyst who lives in South Florida, said Chávez had to rush back from Cuba to stop the political infighting.
On one side are Jaua and Chávez's brother, Adán, who represent the left-wing of the party, said Poleo. On the other side is the military - seen as more business friendly and pragmatic - led by former vice president and current legislator Diosdado Cabello.
mulberry pursesLocal media have suggested that Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro might also be tapped as a successor.
"In the short term, I think the hard-liners like Jaua could hold onto power, but I think in the medium term, the military will impose itself," Poleo said. "They have a more coherent approach and also have the guns."
mulberry walletFo te moment, Jaua seems to be in the good graces of his boss.
When the ailing president stepped off the airplane early Monday, it was Jaua, wearing his trademark beige windbreaker, who first hugged him on the tarmac. And Chávez has praised Jaua's work during his few public appearances.
One of the keys to Jaua's political survival, analysts said, is that he has remained loyal without ever posing a threat.
During a half-hour interview with Telesur network recently, Jaua denied that there were divisions in the ranks or that Chávez's absence had created a vacuum.
While Jaua had been heading cabinet meetings and attending official events while his boss was in Cuba, "the president was exercising his strategic mandate and executing it through the vice presidency," he said.
Athens, Greece (CNN) -- Canadian activists aboard The Tahrir demanded Tuesday that the Greek government repair the boat in which they had tried to sail Monday from Crete toward Gaza in an aborted mission that led to their forced return to port.
The 75-foot boat is one of 10 whose crews are attempting to participate in a flotilla intended to break the Israeli government's control over sea access to Gaza. It was carrying about 40 people when it was intercepted Monday by Greek authorities just a few miles into its planned journey and escorted back to Agios Nikolaos in Crete, said Ehab Latoyef, a spokesman for Canadian Boat Gaza and a member of the activists' steering committee.
