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Dublin: 10 °C Tuesday 21 May, 2013

Fidel Castro is ‘seen in public’ as reports of stroke are dismissed

Venezuela’s Vice President, Elias Jaua, said that he met with the aging revolutionary, which was Castro’s first public appearance in a number of months.

Former Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua shows a picture of Cuba's leader Fidel Castro, third from left, at the Hotel Nacional in Havana Sunday October 21, 2012
Former Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua shows a picture of Cuba's leader Fidel Castro, third from left, at the Hotel Nacional in Havana Sunday October 21, 2012
Image: AP Photo/Franklin Reyes

FORMER VENEZUELAN VICE President Elias Jaua said yesterday that he met with aging revolutionary icon Fidel Castro for five hours and showed The Associated Press photos of the encounter, quashing persistent rumors that the former Cuban leader was on his deathbed or had suffered a massive stroke.

Jaua also confirmed that the 86-year-old retired Cuban president personally accompanied him to the Hotel Nacional after their meeting Saturday, in which they talked about politics, history, culture and tourism.

“He had the courtesy of bringing me to the hotel,” Jaua said Sunday, adding that Castro looked “very well.”

Photograph

Jaua showed a photograph of himself seated in a minibus along with the former Cuban leader, Castro’s wife, Dalia Soto del Valle, a hotel executive and several other people. The photo shows Jaua and Castro smiling broadly, and the former Cuban leader is wearing a checked shirt and cowboy hat.

The public appearance was Castro’s first in months. A top Hotel Nacional executive told the AP earlier on Sunday how Castro had dropped off the Venezuelan guest, then stayed on to chat with hotel staff.

“Fidel Castro was here yesterday, he brought a guest and spoke to workers and hotel leaders for 30 minutes,” commercial director Yamila Fuster said. Fuster was not present, but hotel director Antonio Martinez is seated next to Castro in the photo shown by Jaua, and told Cuban media later that the bearded revolutionary’s health was great.

Fidel is excellent and his health is magnificent,” Martinez said in comments carried on the evening news, which also broadcast images of Jaua showing off his photograph with Fidel. “With his cowboy hat, his smile, his ideas, (he was) very coherent and affectionate with the workers.”

The news presenter also announced that Castro would publish an article on Monday, but did not say what it would be about.

Speculation

State-run Trabajadores newspaper reported that an election worker collected an absentee ballot from Castro at his home and took it to the polls for him, a right it said was extended to all citziens with “impediments.” On Sunday, Cubans were voting in municipal elections which the island’s leaders hold up as evidence the government is representative. Critics say the process is a sham because there is no campaigning and only the Communist Party is recognized.

Castro’s health has been the subject of intense speculation for years, but the rumors gained force in recent days after he failed to publicly congratulate Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a top ally, on his 7 October electoral victory. The former Cuban leader has not appeared since March, when he was shown greeting visiting Pope Benedict XVI, and he has also ceased writing his once-constant opinion pieces, the last of which appeared in June.

Twitter and other social media sites have been abuzz with claims of Castro’s demise. Late last week, a Venezuelan doctor purported to have information that Castro had suffered a stroke, but the same doctor has previously claimed knowledge that turned out to be false.

Sunday’s news from the Hotel Nacional appeared to be Cuba’s attempt to hit back against what it says are false and malicious rumors. A letter attributed to Castro was published on Thursday by Cuban state media. In it, he congratulated graduates of a medical school on the occasion of its 50th anniversary.

Two close family members of Castro have also recently denied he is in grave condition. Juanita Castro, the former leader’s sister, told the AP in Miami that reports of her brother’s condition are “pure rumours” and “absurd.”

Son Alex Castro told a reporter for a weekly Cuban newspaper that his father “is well, going about his daily life.” Castro stepped down in 2006 following a severe illness, handing power to his brother Raul.

Read: Was a Cuban dissident’s car ‘rammed off the road’?>

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Comments (17 Comments)

  • Outlived many who tried to have him killed.

    Reply
  • If communist dictatorships are so great why have so many of them collapsed around the world? Why have they always refused to to give their own people the right to travel as they see fit?
    In theory communism sounds great but human nature will always intrude. Like the quote from animal farm goes “Everyone is equal. Just some are more equal than others.” And that has been the communist system from the get go.
    A democratic capitalist. system may not be perfect but it does work reasonablely well.

    Reply
    • A democratic capitalism would be fine.

      The problem arises when the mega-capitalists buy your democracy out from under you, and own the media so only those paying attention notice. Thats fascism.

      Read more of Mr Orwell. Its getting late..way up past 1984.

      Why do you think they had to trivialise Big Brother into a ‘realty’ show. Halls of mirrors, Mick, it is the reality. Read it again. While you can find a copy. And try to find Farenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.

      Reply
  • How could he have a stroke?

    Bertie&Co cornered that market.

    Reply
  • Cuba has had a lousy human rights record under Castro.

    Reply
  • the sooner he is gone the better

    Reply
    • I cant believe there are people here that support him, he is a dictator that has crushed anyone that has attempted to stand up to him or threaten his power. I know several Cubans in the Florida and all they want to see is Fidel removed from power.
      Some of the Irish here have no idea what his regime is like and are living in a fantasy world. Would you honestly want to live under the rule of Fidel Castro and his goons.

      Reply
    • Oh boy 22/10/12 #

      Well if you met several Irish people in Florida they’d be bitching about Ireland but that don’t mean the whole country is repressed and screwed around with by the government

      Oh wait.,,

      Reply
    • Aaron..hypothetical question.

      You are black, female, not too healthy…which would you prefer to live in, Cuba or Haiti?

      Oh, anbd quite a few of those Floridian Cubans are the mafiosi Fidel threw out.

      Reply
    • Aaron t 22/10/12 #

      Damien are you actually trying to say that the third largest Hispanic community in the USA are descendants of mafiosi. And let me ask you this why are you asking would I rather live in Cuba or Haiti, yes Haiti has its problems probably far worse then Cuba but I still would not like to be living under the Cuban regime. And that question you asked is just an attempt to pull the spotlight away from the regime in Cuba.
      Ask yourself this and be completely honest, would you rather live under Fidel’s control or the government currently here in Ireland.

      Reply
    • @Aaron

      ‘..completely honest.. ..the government currently here in Ireland..’.?

      Completely honest?
      Would that be the IMF or the Troika?

      Do you honestly think there will be any other for the foreseeable?

      You are right(well halfway),its not about either Haiti or Cuba. But no need for me to pull wool(except FROM over your eyes).
      Its global. The national illusions of control are the wool. We’ve been post-national for centuries. As those who pay attention have been post-religion, and scientific in their thought since Galileo escaped the stake-fry.
      As for the mafiosi, get your hands on The Money and the Power: The Making of Las Vegas and its Hold on America…lose your innocence. Who do you think Joe Kennedy was?
      Lots of information still to be had. But you have a little homework to catch up. I could give you a reading list..but its endless and expanding.
      Honesty is a bad attitude to these people. Its regarded as stupid. ‘Smart’ is cynical and callous.
      Some of us aint buying in.

      Reply
  • Spent a few weeks in Cuba two years ago and majority of locals I talked to cant wait til fidel is gone. Havana is a ruin, absolutely falling to pieces. It was interesting going to a history museum there and 2 weeks later visiting the JFK museum in Boston…when it comes to the Cuban missile crisis both sides tell two completely different stories!!

    Reply

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