The Phnom Penh Post

A country moulded by Fidel Cast

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Trump will roll back the changes. Among the Cubans who want change to come faster, and who are tired of the political divisions and tensions that Castro represente­d, there was a hushed sense of relief Saturday at the news of his death.

“People here are so tired. He destroyed this place,” said a university engineerin­g student who was walking home Saturday morning from the market in Havana’s central Vedado neighbourh­ood. He began trembling when a reporter told him that Castro had died, and that this time it wasn’t a mere rumour.

“I think you have to look at both the good and the bad, but there was more bad,” said the student, who declined to give his name, saying it would land him in trouble at school.

As reports of the Cuban leader’s death spread on Saturday morning in the capital, there were no signs of unrest but, perhaps just as tellingly, not much spontaneou­s mourning either. Cubans went on with their lives in a world that is very much Castro’s creation: They went shopping at government stores, waited in government hospitals and tuned in to (or turned off ) round-the-clock Castro tributes on government television.

“This isn’t like the death of Stalin, or Mao, when people threw themselves into the streets and thought the world was coming to an end,” said Aurelio Alonso, a sociologis­t and the deputy editor of the Cuban journal Casa de Las Americas. It was something they have been expecting. “People are mourning, sure,” Alonso said, “but he had a long life.”

For years, foreigners speculated about whether the death of Castro would bring dramatic change. But Castro’s succession plans were completed years ago, leaving his noticeably healthier brother, Raúl, 85, fully in charge. Cuba’s military and security services remain firmly in control of the state and allow no organised opposition or public dissent.

Raúl Castro plans to step down in 2018, and vice president Miguel Diaz-Canel, 56, a career Communist Party official who is not related to the Castros, is in line to succeed him.

Cuba has mostly recovered from the post-Soviet austerity period that left Cubans hungry and desperate in the early 1990s, when riots broke out in Havana and Fidel Castro showed up to quell the crowds.

Fidel opened Cuba up to tourism, and a record 3.5 million visitors arrived last year, far more than the number who came here before his 1959 revolution shuttered the island’s casinos and led to the seizure of all the hotels. Those travellers include an increasing number of US visitors, providing a cash infusion at a moment when economic growth is otherwise stalled.

The first commercial flight from the United States to Havana in more than a half-century is scheduled to land today.

Still, there is growing discontent with the system Castro created and declared “irrevocabl­e”.

The socialist system affords Cubans access to health care, education and food rations but has failed for decades to provide them with more than the essentials. And the country’s economic outlook appears to be going from bad to worse.

With the death of Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez in 2013, Fidel Castro lost his political protege and Cuba’s main economic benefactor. Chávez sent billions of dollars in petroleum shipments, helping the government in Havana keep the lights on and the air conditione­rs running, with enough left over for Cuba to re-export the oil at a profit.

But oil prices have crashed, Venezuela is mired in crisis, and no other easy income source is coming to the Cuban government’s rescue. Cuba’s economic growth is once more stalled, and emigration is at a 10-year high.

Modest steps toward economic liberalisa­tion undertaken by Raúl Castro led to a boom in small businesses, especially restaurant­s and bed-and-breakfasts, but the opening has lost momentum. The government has kept American firms at arm’s length despite a surge of interest from US businesses after Obama’s normalisat­ion moves.

Some have speculated Raúl Castro may pick up the pace of reforms now his brother is gone.

In an April speech, the younger Castro quipped that Cuba was not actually a one-party state: “We have two parties here, just like in the United States,” he said. “Fidel’s and mine.”

Fidel’s is the Communist one, Raúl added, “and you can call mine whatever you want”.

Critics found nothing to laugh at, but former Cuban diplomat Carlos Alzugaray said it wasn’t entirely a joke. Hard-liners within Cuba’s hermetic power circles identified more with Fidel than his younger brother.

Many of the liberalisa­tion moves introduced by Raúl Castro represent an implicit rejection of his older brother’s rigid, statedomin­ated economic model. “Raúl Castro will have a freer hand now,” Alzugaray said.

“It’s not that Fidel Castro would have opposed him,” he said.“But it’s like when you have a sick relative and don’t want to upset them. There are things Raúl probably didn’t want to do while his brother was still around.”

But many Cubans worry about the possibilit­y that Trump could tighten the Cuba trade embargo and toughen travel restrictio­ns. During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump said he would reverse Obama’s policy of expanding relations with Cuba unless the Castro government allowed more religious freedom and freed political prisoners.

Fidel Castro never wanted any statutes of himself to be put up in Cuba. There are no streets or parks named for him. That will almost certainly now change.

The government has declared a nine-day period of mourning, which will be heavy with revolution­ary symbolism.

Castro’s body will lay in state today and on Tuesday in Havana’s Plaza of the Revolution, where Cubans will be able to “pay tribute and sign a solemn oath to fulfill the concept of Revolution”, according to a statement in the Communist Party daily Granma.

After a mass gathering in the plaza planned for Tuesday, Castro’s body will be carried to Santiago de Cuba, at the southeaste­rn end of the island, reversing the journey that his bearded rebels made in January 1959 when they seized power.

Castro will be cremated on the morning of December 4 and laid to rest at the Santa Ifigenia cemetery in Santiago, the site of the tomb of Cuban national hero José Martí and other 19th-century independen­ce leaders.

On Saturday, police and soldiers sealed off access to Havana’s central plaza, where most of the headquarte­rs of the Communist Party and government buildings are clustered. But there was no heavy security deployment visible in the city’s streets.

Castro’s death is “a huge loss for us”, said Jose Candia, 70, who woke up to the news and took his dachshund for a walk along Havana’s Malecón sea wall.

Candia and other older Cubans dedicated their lives to low-paying government jobs that demanded absolute loyalty and discipline. The news of his death seemed to hit them hardest.

“I think of his bravery. His honesty. I’ve been committed to him all my life,” said Yolanda Valdes, 75, a history teacher and Com-

 ?? ADALBERTO ROQUE/AFP ?? Cuban revolution­ary icon Fidel Castro, seen here in 2006, died late on Friday in Havana, his brother announced on national television. As the country comes to terms with his passing, Cubans at home and abroad wonder what the future holds.
ADALBERTO ROQUE/AFP Cuban revolution­ary icon Fidel Castro, seen here in 2006, died late on Friday in Havana, his brother announced on national television. As the country comes to terms with his passing, Cubans at home and abroad wonder what the future holds.
 ?? YAMIL LAGE/AFP ?? Students light candles in honour of Cuban revolution­ary leader Fidel Castro a day after his death, at the Havana University in Havana, on Saturday.
YAMIL LAGE/AFP Students light candles in honour of Cuban revolution­ary leader Fidel Castro a day after his death, at the Havana University in Havana, on Saturday.
 ?? NORBERTO DUARTE/AFP ?? Supporters of Paraguay’s Communist Party gather in Asuncion to pay tribute to Cuban Fidel Castro on Saturday.
NORBERTO DUARTE/AFP Supporters of Paraguay’s Communist Party gather in Asuncion to pay tribute to Cuban Fidel Castro on Saturday.

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