Daily Dispatch

‘Castro lives on’ – leftist leaders

Zuma calls him one of 20th century’s heroes

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LEFTIST Latin American leaders vowed on Tuesday to carry the torch of Fidel Castro’s revolution at a massive rally in honour of the late Cuban communist icon in Havana.

Hundreds of thousands of people packed the capital’s Revolution Square, chanting “I am Fidel!” across the vast esplanade where Castro gave many of his legendary, marathon speeches.

A giant picture of a young, bearded Castro in his guerilla uniform and rifle hung on the National Library, as his brother and successor, Raul Castro, waved at the crowd.

It was the end of two days of tributes in Havana, before Fidel’s ashes are taken on a four-day-long procession across the country yesterday.

One after the other, Latin American, African and Caribbean leaders – along with Greece’s prime minister, the only European leader at the event – lionised the communist leader.

“Mission accomplish­ed, comandante Fidel Castro,” said Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, whose late mentor, Hugo Chavez, had a special bond with Castro.

Maduro declared that Castro was “totally absolved by history”, in reference to the Cuban leader’s famous phrase “history will absolve me” at a trial following a failed uprising in 1953.

Ecuador’s leftist President Rafael Correa praised Castro’s ideology, telling the crowd: “We will keep fighting for these ideas. We swear!”

Leaders praised Castro in almost religious tones, with Bolivian President Evo Morales saying, “Fidel is not dead . . . Fidel is more alive than ever, more necessary than ever.” Raul Castro, 85, thanked the “countless gestures of solidarity and affection from around the world”, ending his speech with the revolution­ary battle cry, “Until victory, always!”

Castro’s death, however, comes as Latin America’s left is losing ground. Maduro is facing a deep economic crisis and fighting opposition attempts to hold a recall referendum, while Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff was impeached in August and a conservati­ve took over in Argentina last year.

Castro – who ruled from 1959 until an illness forced him to hand power to his brother Raul in 2006 – died on Friday at the age of 90.

South African President Jacob Zuma hailed Castro as “one of the great heroes of the 20th century”, citing his opposition to apartheid and his deployment of Cuban troops to back Angola’s government against rebels in 1975.

But several world leaders shunned the tribute, highlighti­ng the divisive legacy of the major Cold War player.

The leaders of Britain, Germany, France, Spain and Canada dispatched others in their place, but even the presidents of friendly nations such as Russia, China and Iran sent deputies.

Castro spent decades feuding with the United States, brought the world to the brink of nuclear war during the 1962 missile crisis, backed guerilla movements in Latin America and deployed his army to conflicts in Africa.

US President Barack Obama, who along with Raul Castro ended decades of enmity to restore diplomatic relations, did not attend. A senior adviser and the top US diplomat in Cuba were designated, but without the status of a “presidenti­al delegation”.

“We continue to have some significan­t concerns about the way the Cuban government currently operates, particular­ly with regard to protecting the basic human rights of the Cuban people,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. — AFP

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