The Phnom Penh Post

Fidel Castro’s ashes reunited with ‘Che’ Guevara

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FIDEL Castro’s ashes were taken yesterday to a symbolic reunion with his fallen comrade-in-arms Ernesto “Che” Guevara in Santa Clara, the first stop in the Cold War titan’s last trip across Cuba.

After two days of tributes in Havana, hundreds of thousands of flag-waving Cubans lined the streets to bid farewell as a military jeep began a four-day journey on Wednesday morning with the cedar urn in tow.

Crowds chanted “I am Fidel!” as the convoy started retracing the victory tour that Castro’s guerrillas took in 1959 to celebrate their defeat of US-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista.

The flag-covered urn, which rested under a glass case on a small olive-green trailer, arrived in Santa Clara after midnight and entered a complex with a mausoleum and museum dedicated to Guevara.

“It’s a historic meeting, two comandante­s who change the history of Cuba and humanity,” said Agnier Sanchez, a 33-yearold medical imaging technician.

A somber guitar, song and dance show played across a giant statue of Guevara as the “caravan of freedom” paused a third of the way into its 950-kilometre trek across the island. The convoy was to resume yesterday morning, heading to other cities before a final ceremony on Sunday in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba, where Castro’s ashes will be laid to rest next to 19th century independen­ce hero Jose Marti.

Cubans were observing the fifth of nine days of mourning for Castro following his death on Friday at age 90. Castro ruled from 1959 until an illness forced him to hand power to his brother Raul in 2006.

Dissidents call Castro a dictator who jailed opponents but others in Cuba praise his legacy of providing free education and health care to Cubans while defying the US “empire.”

“I come from a poor family. I am black. In another era, I wouldn’t have had the opportunit­y to be who I am today,” said Maria Gonzalez, a 31-year-old computer engineer.

Castro met Guevara in 1955 while in exile in Mexico, and the young doctor joined Fidel and Raul on the boat that took them to Cuba a year later.

Guevara won a crucial battle in Santa Clara in 1958, derailing an armoured train and taking the city.

Guevara was given high-ranking positions in the government but he left in 1966 to lead a guerrilla expedition in Bolivia, where he was captured and executed a year later.

His remains were recovered three decades later and taken to Santa Clara, now home to a huge statute of Che and a museum dedicated to the revolution­ary icon.

“His death seemed like something incredible to me. In fact, I don’t know, something that one can never get used to,” Fidel Castro once told a Spanish journalist, admitting that he occasional­ly had dreams in which he spoke with Guevara.

 ?? GUILLERMO LEGARIA/AFP ?? The urn with the ashes of Cuban leader Fidel Castro is driven through Santa Clara yesterday during its four-day journey across the island for burial in Santiago de Cuba.
GUILLERMO LEGARIA/AFP The urn with the ashes of Cuban leader Fidel Castro is driven through Santa Clara yesterday during its four-day journey across the island for burial in Santiago de Cuba.
 ?? LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP ?? A woman holds an image of Thai Crown Prince Maha Vajiralong­korn outside the Grand Palace in Bangkok yesterday.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP A woman holds an image of Thai Crown Prince Maha Vajiralong­korn outside the Grand Palace in Bangkok yesterday.

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