Cubans believe Castro is alive
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban leader Fidel Castro's long absence from public view has fueled wild rumors among his exiled opponents in Miami in recent weeks that he is dead, even one that Russian embalmers were at work preserving his body.
In Cuba, confident Communist Party officials who have been relaxing at the beach are back in town with suntans to show and not an inkling of concern over Castro's health or the country's future without him.
"Don't believe a word. It's all a fabrication by the Miami crowd," said an aide to a senior Cuban official.
Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque began a visit this week to Iran, a sure sign that Castro is not at death's door, commented a Western diplomat.
Castro, 81, has not appeared in public since he underwent life-threatening bowel surgery that forced him to hand over power 13 months ago to his brother Raul Castro, 76.
Few Cubans have access to the Internet, so most had no clue of the rumor frenzy in Miami, set off by two blogs that declared Castro dead on August 24. One falsely reported that Cuban media had been playing classical music for two hours prior to an imminent announcement that never came.
On the streets of Havana, Cubans say they have no doubt the ailing leader is alive, even though the country has not seen video footage of him or heard his voice for three months.
Many Cubans appear too busy making ends meet to reflect about Castro's health, let alone read or listen to the regular articles attributed to him in the party newspaper Granma and read out repeatedly on state media.
"He is alive, I'm sure," said Genaro, a sports coach. "With or without Fidel, Cubans are too busy getting by to think about his absence."
In a new column published on Tuesday, Castro criticized foreign investment, which the government under his brother is considering increasing to revive Cuba's battered economy.
Castro said he reads foreign press reports about Cuba every day and defended his legacy of universal free education and health services provided by the Cuban state, while railing against the "selfish instinct" of U.S.-led capitalism.
CASTRO RELAPSE?
Cuban authorities maintain Castro, who seized power leading a guerrilla force in Cuba's 1959 revolution, is recovering from a series of intestinal operations for a secret illness. But they no longer insist he will be back in office.
Even Castro's closest ally, Venezuela's populist president Hugo Chavez, has stopped saying that his political mentor will soon reappear in his trademark military fatigues to rally the leftist Latin American cause against the United States.
Foreign observers in Havana believe Castro is alive, but say he appears to be chronically ill. Continued...
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