Tue Aug 25, 2009 5:21am IST
By Jeff Franks
HAVANA (Reuters) - The appearance of a fit and alert Fidel Castro on
television after a long absence has surprised Cubans and raised
questions about why the former Cuban president is suddenly back in the
spotlight.
Many saw Sunday's TV broadcast of a video of the legendary Comandante,
the first such broadcast in more than a year, as a move to reassure
Cubans that the 83-year-old Castro is alive and well.
Other observers said it was also a deliberate attempt to bolster the
position of his younger brother and current president, Raul Castro, at a
time when the Cuban leadership faces major economic challenges and
popular discontent.
Fidel Castro, who has mostly been out of public view for the past three
years, was shown on Sunday smiling and chatting with Venezuelan students
in a video of their three-hour meeting the day before.
While he was clearly not the robust Fidel of old, he looked to be in
good health and mentally sound as he spoke about the dangers of global
warming and the personal qualities needed to be a good revolutionary.
Castro has been seen only in occasional photographs and videos since
undergoing surgery for an undisclosed intestinal ailment in July 2006.
He ceded power temporarily to younger brother Raul Castro at the time,
then officially stepped aside last year to allow Raul, now 78, to
succeed him as president.
It has been 14 months since the last video of Fidel Castro ran on Cuba's
state-run television, and none of the previous ones had such extensive
audio of him talking.
He also was shown in the official newspaper Juventud Rebelde on Sunday
in a front-page photo with visiting Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa
and, on Monday, in a two-page photo spread in Communist Party newspaper
Granma. The Granma photographs, of the meeting with Venezuelan students,
were taken by his son Alex Castro.
"My feeling is that the video of a much healthier Fidel Castro is mainly
aimed to convey an image of unity and stability at a time when economic
prospects are looking grim and Cubans are being asked to endure more
austerity measures," said Paolo Spadoni, a post-doctoral fellow at
Tulane University's Center for Inter-American Policy and Research.
"SYMBOL OF THE REVOLUTION"
Cuba is badly short of cash due to a reduction in export income and
increased spending on imports caused by three damaging hurricanes last
year and the impact on the economy of the global financial crisis.
Raul Castro recently announced Cuba had to cut spending for the second
time this year and was expecting little economic growth in 2009. He has
warned several times that more difficulties lie ahead.
Nevertheless, ordinary Cubans said they were surprised to see Castro
looking so much better than earlier videos where he appeared pale and gaunt.
"He looked good to me," said Havana veterinarian Joaquin Parada, 38.
"Many people said he was dead, but it was a lie -- for us he is a god."
Josefa Urfe, a cook from central Havana, said the video had reassured
nervous Cubans that the historical leader of the Cuban Revolution was
alright.
"People were worried because he was never shown, but now that he came
out, they know he is fine," said Urfe.
Cuban political dissident Oscar Chepe said he believed the larger point
of the video was to show support for brother Raul Castro during a time
of tough economic crisis in Cuba.
While Chepe, an economist who was imprisoned for several years for his
opposition views, has little love for Fidel Castro, he said many Cubans
still admire him for engineering the revolution that toppled Fulgencio
Batista on Jan. 1, 1959.
"Raul Castro wants to use his brother as a symbol," Chepe said. "They'll
continue using the figure of Fidel as the old symbol of the revolution
to keep people calm."
Cuba expert Dan Erikson at the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in
Washington, agreed, saying Raul Castro had "faltered on many of his top
promises" such as economic reform.
"This appears to be an effort to take advantage of a good spell in
Fidel's health to maximize his exposure in a way that maintains Raul's
position in power and wards off internal challenges," he said.
Retired worker Orestes Cuellar, 71, said the video convinced him that
Fidel Castro would still be a forceful presence in Cuba for some time in
the future.
"He's whole, he is strong. We'll have "El Caballo" (The Horse) for many
years," he said, using one of the nicknames Cubans use for Fidel Castro.
(Additional reporting by Esteban Israel)
ANALYSIS - Cuba seen trying to boost morale with Castro video | World |
Reuters (25 August 2009)
http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idINIndia-41952220090824?sp=true
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