HAVANA (AP) — It's a blocky, blush-colored
building surrounded by a lush canopy of trees near the rumored home of
Cuban revolutionary
icon Fidel Castro.
Somewhere inside, as best as can be determined, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is fighting for his life.
People in Venezuela and other parts of the
world await word on the fate of a man who once called George W. Bush
"the devil"
in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly, yet there are no
journalists camped out on the sidewalk. Nobody gets past a police
guard without proof of official business inside. Signs on
surrounding streets warn that taking photographs is forbidden.
CIMEQ hospital's well-earned reputation for
guaranteeing the privacy of its elite clientele makes it the perfect
place for
the Venezuelan leader, who is bent on maintaining a large degree
of secrecy about his battle against a cancer somewhere in
the pelvic region. Venezuelan government officials have released
few details on the cancer since it was first discovered in
June 2011, and they've been no more forthcoming during his latest
stay for a fourth surgery, on Dec. 11.
"What Chavez gets there (at CIMEQ) is a lot
of privacy," said Sergio Diaz-Briquets, a Virginia-based analyst and the
author
of "The Health Revolution in Cuba." ''They have been pretty good
at protecting the private affairs of the leaders of the Cuban
revolution, and now we see they're doing the same with Chavez."
CIMEQ, a Spanish-language acronym for Center
for Medical and Surgical Research, is operated jointly by Cuban
civilian and
military authorities and is considered the crown jewel of the
island's health care system. Opened in 1982 in western Havana,
it was the first to use CAT scan technology in Cuba, and is
reputedly at the vanguard of marrow, liver and kidney transplants.
Communist-run Cuba is legendary for being
able to keep a secret, and CIMEQ sits in an upscale Havana neighborhood
where security
is especially tight. The area crawls with police and guards even
on a normal day, and high walls shield pre-revolution mansions
that today house embassies, diplomats, visiting dignitaries and
top officials. Just up the road is a convention center where
Colombia and its largest rebel group are holding supersensitive
peace talks behind closed doors.
CIMEQ serves ordinary Cubans for free under
the island's public health system, but it's renowned as the go-to place
for A-listers,
from famed 91-year-old ballerina Alicia Alonso to the late boxing
great Teofilo Stevenson. High-profile visitors such as Presidents
Rafael Correa of Ecuador and Evo Morales of Bolivia have also
availed themselves of CIMEQ's services.
Those who manage to get past the front gate walk past a parking lot, under an imposing overhang and through an ample front
door to find leatherette-seated waiting areas and broad, labyrinthine corridors.
Even here there's practically no visual clue
suggesting the presence of Chavez. A half-dozen CIMEQ patients
consulted by The
Associated Press said security seems normal and there's no sign of
the Cuban secret service agents in guayabera shirts who
guard President Raul Castro and famous visitors. However, on one
recent day, several cars in the parking lot bore black diplomatic
license plates identifying them as belonging to the Venezuelan
Embassy.
"They've been saying for a while that Chavez is here, ever since he fell ill," said Barbara Ramirez, a 62-year-old Havana
resident. "But I've been coming here for treatment for a long time and I don't see anything."
Chavez is believed to be housed in an
entirely separate ward that is off-limits to all but a few — his
doctors, family members
and the highest-level officials. It is here that Chavez's friend
and mentor, Fidel Castro, 86, was presumably treated for
an intestinal ailment that nearly killed him and forced him into
retirement seven years ago. As has been the case with Chavez,
details of Castro's illness were closely guarded leaving rumor and
speculation to rule the day.
It's a far cry from the scene outside hospitals in other places where the rich and famous undergo treatment.
Think of Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, favored by Hollywood celebrities, where packs of paparazzi stalk the entrance
snapping photos of movie stars who've given birth or survived an overdose.
Or the British royal family, which last year
couldn't guarantee the privacy of the Duchess of Cambridge, still
better known
as Kate Middleton, when she was hospitalized for pregnancy
complications. An Australian radio DJ duo called the hospital and,
mimicking Queen Elizabeth II's warbling speech, pranked a nurse
into revealing private details of her condition. A second
nurse who patched the call through later died in an apparent
suicide.
Chavez has not been seen or heard from since his operation, although his family members, Venezuelan officials and other Latin
American leaders have visited the island to support him.
Cuban government officials have repeatedly declined to offer any information about Chavez's condition, saying they consider
it a matter exclusively for the Venezuelans to handle as they see fit. Venezuelan Embassy employees say privately they are
told nothing about the president's health other than the vague official statements released by Chavez's camp, not even to
confirm where he's staying.
Chavez is no doubt grateful for the discretion, and by some accounts has responded generously.
A commonly repeated story is that after his first surgery 1 ½ years ago, Chavez gave new cars to everyone responsible for
his care, from the surgeons down to a maid who cleaned the room. The rumors were never confirmed, but the purported gifts
are said to have inspired jealousy and infighting among hospital staff.
Some have questioned Chavez's decision to
opt for Cuba instead of the cancer center at Sao Paulo's Sirio-Libanes
hospital,
considered the top facility of its kind in Latin America.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff invited Chavez to seek treatment
there when he was first diagnosed.
But in choosing Cuba, the Venezuelan leader got a guarantee of privacy while handing a public relations victory to communist
leaders who tout health care achievements among the Cuban Revolution's great successes.
"There was a political message, too: the complete trust that Chavez put in Cuba and its public medical system," said Eduardo
Bueno, a Latin American studies professor at the Iberoamerican University in Mexico City.