The Star Malaysia

Cuba mourns Fidel Castro

Nation continues to grieve as it prepares to bid farewell to iconic leader

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Havana: Cuba mourned its revolution­ary leader Fidel Castro as the communist island prepared to bid farewell to the towering giant of its modern history with memorials and a four-day funeral procession.

After the stunned commotion triggered by Saturday’s announceme­nt that Castro, 90, had died, yesterday was set to be a day of preparatio­ns ahead of a flurry of events to mark his passing.

Castro, a titan of the 20th century who beat the odds to endure into the 21st, died late Friday after surviving 11 US administra­tions and hundreds of assassinat­ion attempts. No cause of death was given.

President Raul Castro said that his older brother’s remains would be cremated on Saturday, the first of nine days of national mourning.

There was no official confirmati­on on whether this had yet happened.

A series of memorials will begin today, when Cubans are called to converge on Havana’s iconic Revolution Square.

Castro’s ashes will then go on a four-day island-wide procession before being buried in the southeaste­rn city of Santiago on Dec 4.

Santiago, Cuba’s second city, was the scene of Castro’s ill-fated first attempt at revolution in 1953 – six years before he succeeded in ousting US-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista.

Adored by supporters as a saviour and reviled by enemies as a tyrant, Castro ruled Cuba from 1959 until he handed power to his brother Raul in 2006 amid a health crisis.

Even in retirement Castro wielded influence behind the scenes, and regularly penned diatribes against American “imperialis­m” in the state press.

The news of Castro’s death drew strong and polarized reactions across the world.

In Miami, just 370km away, crowds of Cuban-Americans danced in the streets for a second night, celebratin­g Castro’s death.

Among the cacophony of car horns, drums, loud music and singing in the city’s Little Havana neighborho­od, a chant rang out: “Fidel, you tyrant, take your brother too!“

However Russian President Vladimir Putin hailed Castro as “the symbol of an era,” and China’s Xi Jinping said “Comrade Castro will live forever.”

There were sharply different US reactions from outgoing President Barack Obama and President-elect Donald Trump.

Obama, who embarked on a historic rapprochem­ent with Cuba in 2014, said the US extended a “hand of friendship” to the Cuban people.

But Trump dismissed Castro as “a brutal dictator.”

The future of the US-Cuban thaw is uncertain under Trump, who has threatened to reverse course if Havana does not allow greater human rights. — AFP

 ??  ?? Solemn goodbye: Students lighting candles in honour of Castro a day after his death, at the Havana University in Havana. — AFP
Solemn goodbye: Students lighting candles in honour of Castro a day after his death, at the Havana University in Havana. — AFP

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