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Paper
prints Castro's birthday message
By Anita Snow
Associated Press Writer
Havana
Yahoo
News
Infosearch:
Máximo Tomás
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
August 13, 2006
On his 80th birthday, Fidel Castro cautioned Cubans on Sunday that
he faced a long recovery from surgery and advised them to prepare
for "adverse news," but he urged them to stay optimistic.
The
Fourth
photographs published
STATEMENT ATTRIBUTED TO CASTRO
La Nueva Cuba
August 13, 2006
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As the Communist
Youth newspaper published the first photographs of the Cuban leader
since illness forced him to step aside as president two weeks ago,
Castro said his health had improved, but warned that risks remain.
"I feel very happy," said a statement attributed to Castro
in the Juventud Rebelde newspaper. "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."
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, Defense Minister Raul Castro.
Castro's close
friend and political ally, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, said
Saturday that he would visit the Cuban leader.
"Tomorrow
I will be with Fidel celebrating his 80th birthday," Chavez
said at a news conference in Caracas after declaring his candidacy
for re-election in December.
"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 has 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.
___
Associated Press
writer Natalie Obiko Pearson in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed
to this report.
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