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Cubans Await News on Castro's Health
Castro's condition unknown after surgery; he
gives up power for 1st time in 47 years or rule
HAVANA, Aug. 1, 2006 By ANITA SNOW Associated Press Writer
(AP)
(AP) Fidel Castro, who has defied the
United States for nearly half a century while wielding absolute
power over this island 90 miles south of Florida, remained out of
sight Tuesday after undergoing intestinal surgery and temporarily
turning over power to his brother Raul.
The surprise
announcement that Castro had been operated on to repair a "sharp
intestinal crisis with sustained bleeding" stunned Cubans on the
island and in exile, and marked the first time that Castro, two
weeks away from 80th birthday, had relinquished power in 47 years of
rule.
People went about their business as normal on the
streets of Havana early Tuesday, standing in line for buses to
school and work, and jogging along the city's famous Malecon
seawall.
Some government work centers called workers to
participate in outdoor political gatherings later Tuesday to express
their support for Fidel Castro.
The news came Monday night in
a statement read on state television by his secretary, Carlos
Valenciaga. The message said Castro's condition was apparently due
to stress from a heavy work schedule during recent trips to
Argentina and eastern Cuba. He did not appear on the
broadcast.
Castro, who took control of Cuba in 1959, resisted
repeated U.S. attempts to oust him and survived communism's demise
elsewhere, also said in the statement that he was temporarily
handing over leadership of the Communist Party to his younger
brother.
Raul Castro, the defense minister who turned 75 in
June, also did not appear on television and made no statement on his
own. For decades the constitutional successor to his brother, Raul
Castro has assumed a more public profile in recent
weeks.
Fidel Castro last appeared in public Wednesday as he
marked the 53rd anniversary of his July 26 barracks assault that
launched the revolution. The Cuban leader seemed thinner than usual
and somewhat weary during a pair of long speeches in eastern
Cuba.
"The operation obligates me to undertake several weeks
of rest," Castro's letter read. Extreme stress "had provoked in me a
sharp intestinal crisis with sustained bleeding that obligated me to
undergo a complicated surgical procedure."
The calm delivery
of the announcement appeared to signal that there would be an
orderly succession should Fidel Castro become permanently
incapacitated.
White House spokesman Peter Watkins said U.S.
authorities were monitoring the situation: "We can't speculate on
Castro's health, but we continue to work for the day of Cuba's
freedom."
On Monday, before Castro's illness was announced,
President Bush was in Miami and spoke of the island's
future.
"If Fidel Castro were to move on because of natural
causes, we've got a plan in place to help the people of Cuba
understand there's a better way than the system in which they've
been living under," he told WAQI-AM Radio Mambi, a Spanish-language
radio station. "No one knows when Fidel Castro will move on. In my
judgment, that's the work of the Almighty."
Castro has
resisted U.S. demands for multiparty elections and an open economy
and has insisted his socialist system would long outlive
him.
Cuban exiles celebrated in the streets of Miami, but
Havana's streets were quiet overnight as Cubans awaited further word
on Castro's condition.
It was unknown when or where the
surgery took place or where Castro was recovering.
Ongoing
intestinal bleeding can be serious and potentially life-threatening,
said Dr. Stephen Hanauer, gastroenerology chief at the University of
Chicago hospitals. He said it was difficult to deduce the cause of
Castro's bleeding without knowing what part of the digestive tract
was affected.
Ulcers are a common cause of bleeding in the
stomach or upper intestine, while a condition called diverticulosis
also can provoke bleeding in the lower intestine, especially in
people over age 60, Hanauer said. The condition involves weakened
spots in the intestinal lining that form pouches, which can become
inflamed and provoke bleeding.
Fidel Castro seemed optimistic
of recovery, asking that celebrations scheduled for his 80th
birthday on Aug. 13 be postponed until Dec. 2, the 50th anniversary
of Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces.
With Havana's streets
calm, an electronic news ticker at the U.S. diplomatic mission
provided the only clue that something dramatic had occurred inside
Cuba's government: "All Cubans, including those under the
dictatorship, can count on our help and support. We respect the
wishes of all Cubans."
Waiters at a popular cafe in Old
Havana were momentarily stunned by the news but quickly returned to
work.
"He'll get better, without a doubt," said Agustin
Lopez, 40. "There are really good doctors here, and he's extremely
strong."
But Martha Beatriz Roque, a leading Cuban government
opponent in Havana, said she believed Castro must be gravely ill to
have stepped aside _ even temporarily.
"No one knows if he'll
even be alive Dec. 2 when he's supposed to celebrate his birthday,"
she said.
She added that opposition members worried they
could be targeted for repression during a government change _
especially if authorities fear civil unrest.
Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez, Castro's strongest international ally,
expressed distress during a visit to Vietnam. He said he called the
Cuban leader's office after hearing the news.
"We wish
President Fidel Castro will recover rapidly. Viva Fidel
Castro!"
Chinese President Hu Jintao also sent a message of
good wishes to Castro, the official Xinhua News Agency
said.
Across the Florida straits in Miami, exiles waved Cuban
flags on Little Havana's Calle Ocho, shouting "Cuba! Cuba! Cuba!" as
drivers honked their horns. Over nearly five decades, hundreds of
thousands of Cubans have fled Castro's rule, many of them settling
in Miami.
Castro has been in power since the Jan. 1, 1959,
triumph of the armed revolution that drove out dictator Fulgencio
Batista. He has been the world's longest-ruling head of government
and his ironclad rule has ensured Cuba's place among the world's
five remaining communist countries, along with China, Vietnam, Laos
and North Korea.
The son of a prosperous plantation owner,
Castro's official birthday is Aug. 13, 1926, although some say he
was born a year later.
Talk of Castro's mortality was taboo
until June 23, 2001, when he fainted during a speech in the sun.
Although Castro quickly recovered, many Cubans understood for the
first time that their leader would eventually die.
Castro
shattered a kneecap and broke an arm when he fell after a speech on
Oct. 20, 2004, but laughed off rumors about his health, most
recently a 2005 report he had Parkinson's disease.
But the
Cuban president also said he would not insist on remaining in power
if he ever became too sick to lead: "I'll call the (Communist) Party
and tell them I don't feel I'm in condition ... that please, someone
take over the command."
___
Associated Press reporters
Vanessa Arrington in Havana; Laura Wides-Munoz in Miami; Tran Van
Minh in Hanoi, Vietnam; and Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner in Chicago
contributed to this report.
MMVI
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