Cuba Politics News and Information


Silence of Fidel Castro prepares Cuba for his death


Published: Wed December 13, 2006
By: Publisher in Cuba Politics > Castro's Cuba
Tools: Tell-a-Friend | Email this author | Printer Friendly | Del.icio.us This

Reuters | By Esteban Israel

(original title: Cubans wonder if they will see Castro again)

Cubans are increasingly talking in the past tense about Fidel Castro, the man who governed their lives for 47 years.

Castro has not appeared in public since he underwent emergency intestinal surgery and temporarily handed over the presidency to his younger brother, Raul Castro, on July 31.

Cubans have not been told what Castro, 80 and in power since 1959, has wrong with him or where he is.

“On television they hardly mention him and when they do it’s as if he was already dead,” said Roberto, a self-employed Cuban who did not give his surname as he waited at a bus stop.

“The official silence is preparing the country” for his death, said Walter, an artist. “But people love him and want to know what is wrong with him.”

There is no way to measure public opinion in the single-party socialist country, where the media is state-controlled, but many Cubans admit to anxiously believing Castro may be on his way out.

Castro’s failure to appear at a military parade on Dec 2. marking the 50th anniversary of the start of his guerrilla uprising was the clearest signal to Cubans that he will not be back to govern. The festivities were also a delayed celebration of Castro’s August 13 birthday.

The Cuban government released last week a CD-ROM with 998 speeches by the famously wordy revolutionary as part of a series of homages to the ailing leader that have convinced many Cubans he is at death’s door.

Cubans were told on Tuesday that communist ally North Korea bestowed on Castro the title of “labour hero” and no one was surprised by his absence from the ceremony.

“When Fidel is no longer there,” has become a regular phrase used by the Cuban leadership when seeking to make their point to the country that the political system will endure after Castro, the last key figure from the Cold War to remain in power.

SIGNS OF POOR HEALTH

Since handing over power temporarily to his brother, Castro has been seen only in photographs and video images, the last shown on October 28 and showing a frail and shuffling old man.

Castro’s failure to call his closest ally, President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, to congratulate him on his December 3 reelection, was fresh indication that his health may be declining further, setting off rumours of his death among exiled Cubans in Miami.

Many Cuban exiles have been wishing Castro dead for years.

Castro has not met with an old friend, Nobel Prize winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez of Colombia, who is in Havana, according to a friend of the writer.

Officials in the United States, which has long been Cuba’s political foe, suspect Castro has terminal cancer, which Havana has denied repeatedly.

Cuban officials have insisted he is recovering, though fewer are doing so and more are stressing the importance of his legacy over his presence as the country’s leader.

Since last Friday, Cuban television has broadcast parts of a recent conference on Castro’s role in history that drew left-wing politicians, intellectuals and activists from dozens of countries.

“The enemies of the revolution are counting the minutes waiting and wishing for Fidel’s death,” Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque told the conference.

“What they don’t understand is that Fidel is no longer just Fidel, he is his people,” he said.

———————————————- Havana Journal Advertisements————————————————

Get ready… HavanaDomainsForSale.com

Find Fidel Castro merchandise at CafePress.com

Find Fidel Castro items on eBay

Find Fidel Castro items on Amazon

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



CONTACT US with news tips, press releases, announcements, travel notes, etc

Comments

#1 - On Wed December 13, 2006, Publisher (posts: 3310) wrote:

It’s been WAAAAAAY too quiet in Cuba and I am getting the sense that everyone is talking about Fidel in the past tense and preparing history so that it will “absolve him”.

Cubans know. They may not have the official news announcement of Fidel Castro’s death but they know.

I think this silence is Cuba-speak by the government and even Fidel. Cubans always have to read between the lines to get the truth.

I can’t quite put my finger on it but Castro was always known for giving speeches and being on television all the time, now nothing. Nothing. Get it? Castro has nothing to say because he cannot speak.

Fidel Castro is dead or dying. The next time he will be seen in public will be at his funeral.

Read between the lines people.


Signature:

This is my signature - get yours in Your Control Panel. Go ahead and add a link to your site. Self promotion is permitted as long as it is beneficial to our community.

#2 - On Thu December 14, 2006, Pete Chavez wrote:

I think he’s dead already or in a coma.  If he still had use of his senses he would have at least made a radio broadcast while his birthday was being celebrated and maybe not a long drawn out speech but some sort of address.
They are just trying to ease the people into a seemingly orderly transfer of power so there won’t be civil unrest.  Civil unrest might encourage a power vacuum in the upper echelons of the government and military and that is where their fear is, not with the people.


#3 - On Sat December 16, 2006, YUCA wrote:

He has met his fate already, today the city of Miami held a closed meeting discussing street security issues before announcing his death.


#4 - On Thu December 21, 2006, MiamiCuban wrote:

Well, Delahunt and the other representatives just returned from Cuba and confirmed that not only is Castro not terminally ill, but he’s expected to return soon.  Is the city of Miami still planning to announce his death?


#5 - On Thu December 21, 2006, Publisher (posts: 3310) wrote:

They also said that they do not believe that they were being told the truth.

If you read between the lines, what I get is that Fidel may not have cancer and may not have a terminal illness yet I get the sense that he is dying. If his organs fail, then true, he did not die of cancer or a terminal illness. He just died from old age or an infection or something like that.

The leaders of Miami were probably fed bogus information on purpose to see how the rumor spread and who leaked the info to whom.


Signature:

This is my signature - get yours in Your Control Panel. Go ahead and add a link to your site. Self promotion is permitted as long as it is beneficial to our community.

#6 - On Fri August 17, 2007, Publisher (posts: 3310) wrote:

Pedro, today is August 17th and the chatter has reached a fever pitch. We have quoted other sources with other stories in this post

Hate to do this but… Perez Hilton is reporting that Castro is dead.


Signature:

This is my signature - get yours in Your Control Panel. Go ahead and add a link to your site. Self promotion is permitted as long as it is beneficial to our community.

#7 - On Fri August 24, 2007, Publisher (posts: 3310) wrote:

More rumors right now at 4:47pm Eastern time on Friday August 24, 2007.

Please visit this post where I am posting all sources I can find:

http://havanajournal.com/politics/entry/is-fidel-castro-dead-more-rumors/


Signature:

This is my signature - get yours in Your Control Panel. Go ahead and add a link to your site. Self promotion is permitted as long as it is beneficial to our community.

Submit A Comment / Login

Name:

Email: (Required. For Havana Journal use only. Not displayed to public.)

URL:

Notify me of follow-up comments?

 Please enter the word/numbers you see in the image above:

View all Havana Journal politics articles in 2009

Cuba Marketplace


BUY CUBAN CIGARS



Havana.biz for Cuba consulting, domains and websites in development


Images of Cuba


Illustration of Docks in Cuba
Antique red motorcycle in Havana
Colonel Theodore Roosevelt

Write Here


CONTACT US with news tips, press releases, announcements, travel notes, requests for information, etc.

Write your own article

Section Archive


Cuba news from this Section dated:

RSS Subscriptions


Miscellaneous


Join the Cuba Chamber of Commerce

Cuba Chamber of Commerce -- Founding Member

Please note that US citizens are restricted by US laws that prohibit the purchase of any products made in Cuba. US citizens are also restricted by law to spend any money in Cuba.

HavanaJournal.com is a Cuba information resource and does not endorse sales of Cuban products to US citizens.