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Speculation over state
of Fidel Castro's health
By JOE WARMINGTON
CNews
Canada
Infosearch:
José F. Sánchez
Analyst
Bureau Chief
Cuba
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
January 27, 2007
HAVANA -- Sun columnist Joe Warmington has just returned from Cuba
where he took the pulse of the nation. This is his report on a country
holding its breath:
Is Fidel Castro
already dead?
The official
government line -- which many Cubans believe -- is that Castro is
alive and slowly recovering from serious abdominal surgery. Three
surgeries actually. But if he is not dead (or close to it) then
why have Cuban authorities not shown him? There haven't been any
new pictures or footage in months of the most photographed man in
Cuba.
Today we challenge
the Cuban authorities to end the mystery and confirm he is still
breathing. Or admit he has passed on.
Previous shots
of him in August and September showed a frail old man in such bad
health that American medical experts, believing it was cancer, gave
him just months to live. Then came reports from Spanish doctors
that it was not cancer but bowel blockages that were complicated
by a series of stubborn infections.
The current
level of information -- and disinformation -- is all by classic
design , a power transition plan thought out years ago and now being
executed to perfection, says Cuban-born Canadian Alberto Benitez.
"It's all a scheme to keep the people confused and keep their
mind off the real issue , which is their lives. I do think he is
dead but I am aware he could surprise us and not be. The only thing
I will say is I hope he is dead and his brother, too. That's what
would be best for the people." It's a harsh opinion. I don't
quite hear that sentiment here but the cult of Fidel is not as vital
for day-to-day living as the government insists.
"Fidel
being alive or dead is not important to the people of Cuba,"
said a woman named Hilda. "What matters here are the people
of Cuba and not the revolution."
She noted there
has not been a get-well rally staged for him and she is not sure
people will flock to the streets in tears upon confirmation of his
death as so many believe. "Maybe, maybe not," she said.
But others say
there will definitely be an outcry of emotion since he's the only
"god" they have ever known. "He is such a nice man,"
said Rodolfo Martinez. "I wish him well."
Some warn not
to underestimate him. "Fidel Castro Ruz is stronger than any
person in this room and he will be back and better than ever,"
said one woman.
This came, however,
a week after he told the press Castro was "gravely" ill.
DIRECT LINE
TO CASTRO
Other times
when he vouched for Castro still being alive he was with him in
pictures or spoke with the president directly over the phone. This
time he was talking with vice-president Carlos Lage -- unusual since
he has a direct line to Castro.
All the innuendo
and speculation has created a buzz down here not seen since a time
in the 1980s when he disappeared for weeks. He came back then but
they are not so sure about this time.
"We haven't
seen him in three months and they never, ever mention him or his
health on the TV here," said Havana resident Carlos Rodriguez.
"Most people here are pretty sure he's already gone and not
coming back."
'POWER AND CONTROL'
Many people
indicated that in this guarded communist regime it's conceivable
that Castro is already dead. But they take no chances in saying
so much -- just in case.
"They will
try to keep (the aura of) Fidel around for as long as possible,"
said one source. " Power and control is the name of the game."
There are subtle
clues of a change coming everywhere. One is some new billboards
showing a healthy Fidel with his arm raised in the air -- as if
to say he's still in control.
But another
hint of what is to come can be found in some hotels where near giant
framed pictures of Fidel are new ones of Raul -- the temporary president.
And in Habana Vieja (Old Havana) there is a higher presence of police
in the street.
Nothing much
changes in Cuba. If your family was driving a 1958 Chevy in 1958,
you may still be.
Meanwhile the
mood is like the textbook propping-up of a tired and long entrenched
dictatorship.
No one knows
what the truth is. Mystery is the order of the day with most people
believing the powers that be are scrambling behind the scenes to
permanently install their new despot -- the brother of the old one
no less.
But who really
knows? That's what makes this story so intriguing and why there
are so many journalists in Havana right now.
"I have
been here seven weeks," said one European journalist. "And
I don't talk about why I am here." Freedom of movement, opinions
and expression are not established down here.
Fidel Castro's
health is guarded as a state secret. And so is his whereabouts.
Some say he is at his compound in Havana, some say he's at his retreat
in the Sierra Maestra mountains. Others say he's in Havana's military
hospital or even at a private clinic in Spain.
Wherever he
is, he has people talking. Quietly.
It has been
cleverly handled and stage- managed -- almost out of Moon Over Parador,
a 1988 movie where actor Richard Dreyfuss stands in as a double
for a deceased dictator.
This script
is the perfect way to stem the tide and ensure there is no frenzy
that could see Raul ousted.
It's the ideal
way to absorb the reality of Fidel's death and still maintain control
of a country badly in need of reforms.
"I mean
he didn't give one last speech," said one man.
Could it mean
he's dead? "Not even the best communists could keep a secret
like that," said one expert on Cuba.
"But Joe
Stalin's death was not announced for weeks," said Benitez.
"If Fidel is dead this is how they would handle it. They don't
want change."
But the long-suffering
people do want change and hang on every clue.
In the four
speeches Raul Castro has given, he has mentioned reaching out to
the Americans on every occasion, something Fidel would never do.
Is that another sign Fidel is dead?
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