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Ricardo Alarcon, Cuban point man for U.S. relations, dies aged 84

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - Ricardo Alarcon, one of the most powerful men in Cuba under former President Fidel Castro and a key player in relations with the United States, died in Havana on Saturday evening, his family said.

The former diplomat was one of the architects of the first migratory dialogue between Washington and Havana in 1978, the year in which negotiatio­ns also began with a group of representa­tives of the Cuban community in the United States.

Alarcon played a key role in negotiatin­g an immigratio­n agreement with the United States that put an end to a massive exodus of Cubans by sea in 1994.

He was also central in arranging the return of young castaway Elian Gonzalez from relatives in Miami to his father in Cuba in 2000.

The cigar-puffing and rum-sipping Alarcon, invariably clad in a white guayabera, at one point became the third most powerful man in the country’s Communist Party elite after Fidel and Raul Castro.

He was foreign minister between 1992 and 1993 and then served as president of the National Assembly for 20 years until he was removed from the post and the ruling political leadership.

No reason was given for Alarcon’s fall from grace, however his closest aid, Miguel Alvarez, had been arrested the previous year for being a U.S. spy and it is standard procedure in such cases to consider all contacts compromise­d.

Alarcon remained a loyal member of the Revolution despite his political downfall.

“To Ricardo Alarcon de Quesada, the Master of the diplomats of our generation, we will always have deep respect, admiration and infinite affection,” Deputy Foreign Minister Josefina Videl, Cuba’s lead negotiator with the administra­tion of former U.S. President Barack Obama, tweeted on Sunday.

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