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Saturday, April 06, 2013

Fidel Castro breaks 9-month hiatus as essayist

Posted on Friday, 04.05.13

Fidel Castro breaks 9-month hiatus as essayist
By PETER ORSI
Associated Press

HAVANA -- Retired Cuban leader Fidel Castro published his first column
in nearly nine months on Friday, urging both friends and foes to use
restraint amid tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

In the brief piece published in Communist Party daily Granma and other
official media, Castro warned of the impact that nuclear war could
unleash in Asia and beyond. He said Havana has always been and will
continue to be an ally to North Korea, but gently admonished it to
consider the well-being of humankind.

"Now that you have demonstrated your technical and scientific advances,
we remind you of your duty to the countries that have been your great
friends, and it would not be fair to forget that such a war would affect
... more than 70 percent of the planet's population," he said.

Castro used stronger language in addressing Washington, saying that if
fighting breaks out, President Barack Obama's government "would be
buried by a flood of images that would present him as the most sinister
figure in U.S. history. The duty to avoid (war) also belongs to him and
the people of the United States."

North Korea has issued a series of escalating threats in recent weeks as
the United States and South Korea have conducted joint military
exercises beginning in March, and expressed anger over U.N. sanctions
imposed after it held a nuclear test in February. Pyongyang says it
needs nuclear weapons for self-defense, and on Tuesday it announced it
would restart a plutonium reactor that was shut down in 2007.

Analysts say the elevated rhetoric is probably calculated to push for
concessions from South Korea, prod Washington into talks and bolster the
image of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

But Castro called the situation "incredible and absurd," and said war
would cause terrible harm to the people of both Koreas and benefit no one.

"This is one of the gravest risks of nuclear war since the October
Crisis in 1962 involving Cuba, 50 years ago," he wrote, a reference to
what is known in English as the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Castro last published one of his columns known as "Reflections" on June
19, 2012. In October, amid the latest round of rumors of his purportedly
dire health, he said he had stopped writing them not due to illness but
because they were occupying space in official newspapers and state TV
news broadcasts that was needed for other uses.

Letters signed by him have been released periodically, however,
including a message of condolences last month following the death of
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a close friend and ally.

He also appeared in February at a voting station, bantering for more
than an hour with poll workers, island reporters and children.

Castro has been out of office since 2006, when a near-fatal intestinal
ailment forced him to hand power to his younger brother Raul.

Follow Peter Orsi on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Peter-Orsi

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/04/05/3324991/fidel-castro-breaks-9-month-hiatus.html#storylink=misearch

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