Castro's recovery has Cubans befuddled
By Anthony Boadle
REUTERS
10:40 a.m. April 27, 2007
HAVANA – Political rallies in Cuba these days end with chants of "Long
Live Fidel! Long Live Raul!" but which of the Castro brothers is running
the country is anyone's guess.
Even though he has not appeared in public since emergency bowel surgery
nine months ago put him at death's door, the latest signs are that
ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro has rebounded and is well enough to
resume some government duties.
His die-hard supporters hope the 80-year-old "Comandante" will reappear
at the May 1 workers parade in Havana's Revolution Square, but few
expect him to be strong enough to put on his uniform and deliver a
rousing speech.
Photographs of Castro's meeting with a senior Chinese Communist Party
official last week showed he has regained some weight. The one-hour
meeting and three recent editorial columns indicate he is back to work
at least on foreign policy issues.
Formally, his lower-profile younger brother and designated successor,
Raul Castro, is Cuba's acting president and is running day-to-day
government in his absence.
"By law it is Raul governing, but we never know about these things,"
said saleswoman Elizabeth Centurion, who was born after Cuba's 1959
revolution and has known only one leader.
"It looks like no one is running this place. It's hard to understand
what's going on," said Danilo, a mechanic mounting a Russian Lada engine
in his British-built 1959 Ford Prefect.
Officials insist Fidel Castro is recovering steadily and it is only a
matter of time before he again takes the helm.
Most Cuba watchers abroad say a transfer of power to Raul Castro, 75,
has already taken place, with speculation centered on whether Fidel
Castro will assume a role as elder statesman or return to help set and
even dictate policy.
U.S. intelligence sources said this week they believe Castro's health
was most precarious last year after botched surgery for diverticulitis,
or inflammation of the colon.
"The transition has basically already occurred to Raul and there's no
expectation that Fidel will come back in full control, though he
definitely will be in the background participating in decision-making,"
a senior U.S. intelligence official said in Washington.
DECISIONS ON HOLD
Foreign businessmen and diplomats in Havana say government
decision-making appears to be paralyzed at the prospect of Fidel Castro
resuming full leadership of the government.
The elder Castro, known for micromanaging most aspects of Cuban society
and calling ministers for information in the middle of the night, had
begun re-centralizing state control over the economy in recent years.
By contrast, Raul is seen as a relaxed 9-to-5 leader who likes to govern
through team work and has encouraged debate on ways to fix the
shortcomings of Cuban socialism.
"I suspect not very many at the top or in the bureaucracy really want
Fidel back," said Cuban sociologist Marifeli Perez-Stable at the
Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington.
Fidel Castro's return to the scene could block practical steps to keep
Cubans happy, such as opening up more opportunity for self-employment,
she said.
The word on Havana streets is that initial reforms under Raul Castro
could include the right to buy cell phones, computers and DVDs, and to
stay at tourist hotels that are out of bounds for Cubans.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070427-1040-cuba-castro-.html
By Anthony Boadle
REUTERS
10:40 a.m. April 27, 2007
HAVANA – Political rallies in Cuba these days end with chants of "Long
Live Fidel! Long Live Raul!" but which of the Castro brothers is running
the country is anyone's guess.
Even though he has not appeared in public since emergency bowel surgery
nine months ago put him at death's door, the latest signs are that
ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro has rebounded and is well enough to
resume some government duties.
His die-hard supporters hope the 80-year-old "Comandante" will reappear
at the May 1 workers parade in Havana's Revolution Square, but few
expect him to be strong enough to put on his uniform and deliver a
rousing speech.
Photographs of Castro's meeting with a senior Chinese Communist Party
official last week showed he has regained some weight. The one-hour
meeting and three recent editorial columns indicate he is back to work
at least on foreign policy issues.
Formally, his lower-profile younger brother and designated successor,
Raul Castro, is Cuba's acting president and is running day-to-day
government in his absence.
"By law it is Raul governing, but we never know about these things,"
said saleswoman Elizabeth Centurion, who was born after Cuba's 1959
revolution and has known only one leader.
"It looks like no one is running this place. It's hard to understand
what's going on," said Danilo, a mechanic mounting a Russian Lada engine
in his British-built 1959 Ford Prefect.
Officials insist Fidel Castro is recovering steadily and it is only a
matter of time before he again takes the helm.
Most Cuba watchers abroad say a transfer of power to Raul Castro, 75,
has already taken place, with speculation centered on whether Fidel
Castro will assume a role as elder statesman or return to help set and
even dictate policy.
U.S. intelligence sources said this week they believe Castro's health
was most precarious last year after botched surgery for diverticulitis,
or inflammation of the colon.
"The transition has basically already occurred to Raul and there's no
expectation that Fidel will come back in full control, though he
definitely will be in the background participating in decision-making,"
a senior U.S. intelligence official said in Washington.
DECISIONS ON HOLD
Foreign businessmen and diplomats in Havana say government
decision-making appears to be paralyzed at the prospect of Fidel Castro
resuming full leadership of the government.
The elder Castro, known for micromanaging most aspects of Cuban society
and calling ministers for information in the middle of the night, had
begun re-centralizing state control over the economy in recent years.
By contrast, Raul is seen as a relaxed 9-to-5 leader who likes to govern
through team work and has encouraged debate on ways to fix the
shortcomings of Cuban socialism.
"I suspect not very many at the top or in the bureaucracy really want
Fidel back," said Cuban sociologist Marifeli Perez-Stable at the
Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington.
Fidel Castro's return to the scene could block practical steps to keep
Cubans happy, such as opening up more opportunity for self-employment,
she said.
The word on Havana streets is that initial reforms under Raul Castro
could include the right to buy cell phones, computers and DVDs, and to
stay at tourist hotels that are out of bounds for Cubans.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070427-1040-cuba-castro-.html
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