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Saturday, July 14, 2007

Che Guevara body dispute 'laid to rest'

Che Guevara body dispute 'laid to rest'
Article from: Agence France-Presse
From correspondents in Havana
July 15, 2007 07:08am

THE remains of Che Guevara brought here from Bolivia 10 years ago
provided "conclusive" forensic evidence they belonged to the
revolutionary leader, state media said today.

In a lengthy article, the official Granma daily newspaper addressed
claims made by an ex-CIA agent who earlier this year claimed to have
buried Guevara in a secret grave after he was killed in 1967, offering a
clump of his hair for a DNA test to prove it.

Granma said several features of the remains of Guevara "left no room for
doubt" they were authentic, including the pronounced bridge over the
eyes and prominent frontal lobe of the skull that "characterised" Guevara.

The Cuban Government in 1995 announced it had located Che's remains and
returned them to Cuba in 1997 for a pomp- and parade-filled
extravaganza, ending in their interment at a mausoleum in Cuba honouring
Guevara.

In March, former CIA agent and Miami Cuban emigre Gustavo Villoldo, 71,
a veteran of the failed US-backed Bay of Pigs invasion, said he buried
Guevara and two colleagues in October 1967 in a pit in Vallegrande,
Bolivia, after cutting a lock of the hair.

Villoldo said he would give the exact coordinates of the grave only to
the Guevara family if they requested them.

As additional proof of Guevara's identity, Granma said the remains
brought back from Bolivia were missing both hands, which Argentine
coroners in 1967 had amputated to send back to their laboratories for
fingerprint identification.

"But the determining factors were a mould taken of his teeth for a
masking job done for his protection when he left Cuba in the mid 1960s,
which together with dental X-rays taken in the 1950s in Mexico ... were
conclusive," the daily said.

The medic-turned-guerrilla fighter was killed in October 1967 in
Bolivia, where he had gone to foment a leftist uprising.

US Central Intelligence Agency operatives and special forces advisers
helped organise a Bolivian military operation, as a result of which he
was captured and executed, according to documents made available later.

But much to the dismay of the Cuban exile community, Guevara's death
turned him into a cultural icon.

A world-famous 1960 photograph of Guevara taken by Alberto Korda
captured the restless spirit of the long-haired revolutionary after he
had helped Fidel Castro topple a pro-US regime in Cuba.

Guevara appears in painter Andy Warhol's artwork, is the subject of
countless books, articles and the popular 2004 movie, The Motorcycle
Diaries.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22077280-5005961,00.html

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