Posted on 08/13/2006 12:01:48 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
HAVANA - Fidel Castro's younger brother, Raul, made his first public appearance as Cuba's interim president Sunday, receiving Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez at the Havana airport. Chavez arrived to celebrate the elder Castro's 80th birthday.
Earlier, Fidel Castro cautioned Cubans that he faced a long recovery from surgery and advised them to prepare for "adverse news," but he urged them to stay optimistic.
Castro said his health had improved since an unspecified intestinal ailment forced him to step aside as president two weeks ago, but he warned that risks remain.
"I feel very happy," said a statement attributed to Castro in the newspaper Juventud Rebelde. "For all those who care about my health, I promise to fight for it."
In the photos appearing in the online edition of Juventud Rebelde, Castro wears a red and white Adidas warm-up suit, looks a bit tired but is sitting up straight, his eyes alert.
One picture is a close shot of the leader posing with his fist under his chin and in two he is talking on the telephone.
The fourth photograph shows Castro sitting in a chair in front of a bed with a white spread in what appears to be a home, holding up a special supplement published as an homage to him on his 80th birthday in the Saturday edition of Granma, the Communist Party newspaper.
It was impossible to confirm the authenticity of the photographs, which were credited to Estudios Revolucion, a division of Castro's personal support group that collects historic documents and images. But there was no reason to doubt they were real.
Juventud Rebelde also published a handwritten note by Castro to five Cuban men who were convicted of working in the United States as unregistered foreign agents and last week were denied a new trail by a federal appeals court.
"Rene, Antonio, Gerardo, Fernando, Ramon: We will triumph over the monstrous injustice!" read the note in Castro's typical scrawl. It was signed: "Fidel. August 13, 2006 12:39 a.m."
In his statement, Castro said his stability has "considerably improved" but added: "To affirm that the recovery period will take a short time and that there is no risk would be absolutely incorrect."
"I ask you all to be optimistic, and at the same time to be ready to face any adverse news," it added.
"To the people of Cuba, infinite gratitude for your loving support. The country is marching on and will continue marching on perfectly well."
Russian President Vladimir Putin joined those sending greetings to the Cuban leader on his birthday and wished him a speedy recovery.
The Kremlin said Putin also promised that Russia and Cuba would continue to be "active partners." Putin's government has sought to revive relations with the island, which had weakened following the collapse of the Soviet Union.
On Saturday, Granma said Castro was walking and talking again, and even working a bit. It was the most optimistic report yet since intestinal surgery forced him to temporarily turn over presidential powers to his younger brother, the defense minister.
Chavez, Castro's close friend and political ally, had announced Saturday that he would visit the Cuban leader to help celebrate his birthday.
No comments were broadcast when state television showed the Venezuelan leader arriving Sunday, but he had told reporters Saturday: "I'll take him a nice gift, a good cake, and we'll be celebrating the 80 years of this great figure of America and our history."
Chavez also visited Castro in October 2004, two weeks after a fall that shattered the Cuban leader's kneecap and broke his right arm. A picture of the pair on the front page of Granma was the first image published of Castro after the accident.
Saturday's article in Granma though brief was the most detailed statement that Cuba's government had issued since Castro announced July 31 that he was temporarily ceding his powers to his brother, No. 2 in the government.
South Florida's Cuban exile community used the newspaper report to criticize the island's government.
"Sadly, Granma's optimism of Fidel Castro's health is in sharp contrast to political prisoners who are rotting in Cuban prisons for simply disagreeing (with him)," said Alfredo Mesa, spokesman for the Cuban American National Foundation. "Dead or alive, change in Cuba must come now. The era of Fidel Castro must end."
Despite the optimistic assessment of Castro's progress, few believed he would make a public appearance on his birthday. No official events were announced for Sunday.
In ceding his powers, Castro blamed an unspecified intestinal problem brought on by a heavy work schedule. He recently traveled to Argentina for a summit of the trade group Mercosur and gave two long speeches in eastern Cuba on July 26, the last time he was seen in public.
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Associated Press writer Natalie Obiko Pearson in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed to this report.
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On the Net:
Communist Youth newspaper Juventud Rebelde: http://www.juventudrebelde.cu
This is the third of four photographs published Sunday Aug. 13, 2006 by Cuba's Communist Youth newspaper's online edition Juventud Rebelde proporting to show The first photographs of Fidel Castro since his illness two weeks ago. The Associated Press cannot verify the authenticity or the date when these photographs were shot. (AP Photo/HO)
Fidel had a colostomy meaning he's got cancer...coughing up blood means the cancer had spread...so...the adverse news is I'm dying soon....???
Hugo will deliver the eulogy is my suspicion.
The torch will be passed.
Okay. Ready.
You mean that's why he's there right now? To give the eulogy? NO...preparing for it later with him and Fidel putting it together now...YES...could be possible...
could be, either way, Fidel is on borrowed time.
I agree...it's unbelievable we 90 miles from Cuba ever allowed this serial killer to remain as Cuba's dictator [can't call him a leader...he's far from that...real leaders lead, he did nothing more than keep the Cuban's in fear that was his only way he kept control of them]. SHAME ON US...
much as the Islamonazis have kept their mindsets bound to regimes of a thousaid years ago, Castro kept his nation stuck in the first half of the 20th century. some leadership.
Please, hear this from his own words. Forget the Yahoo News propaganda photos."
Listen to this...
http://martinoticias.com/media/audio/V-066_060811.wma
That says to me that the AP seriously doubts they are current. And if the AP has doubts, well...
lol.. Methinks ap has been burned enough and seen reuters thoroughly drug thru the mud of late.
In any case, I think we're going to start seeing lots of disclaimers from here on out. Finally.
"Warning: Believing your own two eyes can be hazardous to your health. Please run your reaction through your brain to avoid further damage."
The only person I've seen with less life in his eyes is Al Gore.
Somebody is still jamming shortwave ,I listened to a program that started clear and then a very strong interference moved on chabnnel. The original announcer was saying things like "democratic" Cuba libre" .
Be still my heart.
Do not pass GO! Go straight to Madame Tussaud's.
Thanks for the pic.
The passing of the baton of despotism and tyranny in the Caribbean is complete.
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