The Asian Age

Cuban vote begins end of Castro era

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Havana, March 9: Cuba on Sunday designates the 605 members of its National Assembly, an electoral process without surprise since there are as many candidates as seats.

However, one of them will succeed President Raul Castro in April, marking the first generation­al change of leadership under the island’s Communist rule.

For the first time in nearly 60 years, after the era of the Castro brothers, the presidency of Cuba will go to someone who did not fight in the revolution of 1959.

His name will be known on April 19, the 57th anniversar­y of the failed CIA- backed invasion of the Bay of Pigs, known in Cuba as Playa Giron and considered on the island as “the first defeat of Yankee imperialis­m in Latin America.”

Raul Castro, 86, officially became president in 2008 after two years as interim leader, and following his ailing brother Fidel who had governed since seizing power during the revolution. Fidel died in 2016.

More than eight million Cubans are eligible to vote for provincial assembly delegates and the 605 chosen for the National Assembly, a list screened by the country’s only party, the Communists.

Candidates may be either members of the Cuban Communist Party or not, and may also belong to trade unions or be students.

More than half of the candidates, 322, are women.

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