Millennium Post

Cuba starts Castro burial, entering post-fidel era

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SANTIAGO DE CUBA: Fidel Castro's ashes were taken today to a cemetery in the cradle of his revolution as Cuba opens a new era without the communist leader who ruled the island for decades.

Capping a week of tributes and mass rallies, a jeep pulled the cedar urn into the Santa Ifigenia cemetery in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba as a crowd chanted “viva Fidel!”

Castro, who died on November 25 at age 90, will be laid to rest during a “simple” ceremony near the mausoleum of 19th century independen­ce hero Jose Marti, said his brother and successor, President Raul Castro.

The funeral was closed to the public.

Last night, Raul Castro led a massive, final rally in his brother's honour at Santiago's Revolution Plaza, leading the crowd into pledge to uphold the socialist ideals.

“In front of Fidel's remains ... we swear to defend the fatherland and socialism,” Raul Castro said.

“He demonstrat­ed that, yes we could, yes we can, yes we will overcome any obstacle, threat, turbulence in our firm resolve to build socialism in Cuba,” he said.

While Castro was sidelined by emergency intestinal surgery a decade ago, he remained a towering figure in Cuba.

He was revered by supporters for the free health care and education he spread across the island, and vilified by dissidents who saw him as a brutal dictator.

Although he was an omnipresen­t figure in the lives of Cubans, Castro's dying wish was that no statues be erected in his memory and no streets or building be named after him. The national assembly, which meets later this month, will pass a law to follow Castro's order, his brother said.

“The leader of the revolution rejected any manifestat­ion of a cult of personalit­y,” Raul Castro said. His burial ends a nine-day period of mourning during which Cubans, often encouraged by the government, flooded the streets to pay tribute to Castro, chanting “I am Fidel!” as his ashes were taken across the Caribbean country this week.

“I am very sad because we have lost a father,” said Marta Loida, a 36-year-old university professor sitting on the ground and holding a picture of Fidel Castro after Raul's speech.

The government nurtured the religious-like fervour, with state media calling Castro the “eternal comandante.”

In the past week, Cubans were urged to go to schools and other public buildings to sign an oath of loyalty to his revolution.

“I trust Raul because Raul is Fidel's brother. Fidel taught him everything,” said Irina Hierro Rodriguez, a 23-yearold teacher at yesterday's rally.

Fidel and Raul Castro launched a failed attack on Santiago's Moncada military barracks in July 1953, but it was the seed of a revolution that triumphed in 1959.

After taking power, Fidel Castro became a Soviet ally and was a constant thorn in the side of successive US presidents until illness forced him to hand power to Raul in 2006.

Since succeeding his brother, Raul Castro has implemente­d modest economic reforms in recent years, restored diplomatic relations with the United States and vowed to step down in 2018.

“No longer under the shadow of his older brother, Raul may now feel freer to pursue the modest economic reforms he initiated in the last decade,” said Jorge Duany, director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida Internatio­nal University.

SANTIAGO DE CUBA: Cuban President Raul Castro has pledged to uphold his brother Fidel’s socialist revolution at a massive rally in honour of the communist icon before his burial.

Tens of thousands of flagwaving supporters recited the oath with Raul Castro at the Revolution Plaza of Santiago de Cuba, the cradle of Fidel’s guerrilla struggle.

“He demonstrat­ed that yes we could, yes we can, yes we will overcome any obstacle, threat, turbulence in our firm resolve to build socialism in Cuba,” he said.

“In front of Fidel’s remains ... we swear to defend the fatherland and socialism,” said Castro, who took over when his brother fell ill in 2006.

“Fidel! Fidel! Until victory, always!” Castro said at the evening rally attended by a few foreign leaders, including Cuba’s leftist Latin American allies from Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua, but also figures such as Argentine football legend Diego Maradona.

Capping a nine-day mourning period, Castro’s ashes will be interred today during a “simple” ceremony at Santa Ifigenia Cemetery, near the mausoleum of 19th-century independen­ce hero Jose Marti, his brother said. But Castro said that before dying at the age of 90 on November 25, his brother requested that no monuments or statues be erected in his honour, and that no streets or buildings be named after him.

Legislatio­n will be presented at the next national assembly, which meets later in December, to fulfil his dying wish, Castro said.

“The leader of the revolution rejected any manifestat­ion of a cult of personalit­y,” Raul Castro said.

While he was an omnipresen­t figure in the lives of Cubans after taking power in 1959, Fidel Castro always opposed the constructi­on of statues of his likeness and no streets or buildings are named after him in the country.

Castro’s death has fuelled speculatio­n over the direction the country may take without the man who ruled for almost half a century and left behind a divisive legacy.

Tearful supporters have cheered him for the free education and health care he developed on the island, while detractors call him a brutal dictator who imprisoned dissidents and ran the economy into the ground.

After Fidel is laid to rest, all eyes will turn to Raul Castro’s next move.

While he pledged to defend the socialist revolution, the president has implemente­d modest economic reforms, vowed to step down in 2018 and restored diplomatic ties with the United States.

“No longer under the shadow of his older brother, Raul may now feel freer to pursue the modest economic reforms he initiated in the last decade,” said Jorge Duany, director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida Internatio­nal University.

 ??  ?? Fidel Castro
Fidel Castro
 ??  ?? President Raul Castro
President Raul Castro

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