Times of Oman

Maduro promises to maintain Cuba ties

Newly elected Venezuelan president’s visit appeared aimed in part at allaying Cuban worries about postChavez relations with their biggest ally

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HAVANA: Cuba and Venezuela signed cooperatio­n accords on Saturday for 51 projects as Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, on his first trip to the island since his election, pledged to maintain the close alliance forged by his late predecesso­r, Hugo Chavez.

Maduro said they would jointly spend $2 billion this year on “social developmen­t,” but it was not clear if he was discussing the 51 projects, few details of which were disclosed, or other works.

His visit appeared aimed in part at allaying Cuban worries about post-Chavez relations with the oil-rich South American nation that is Cuba’s biggest ally and benefactor.

Venezuelan oil and money help keep the communist-ruled island’s troubled economy afloat and the government­s have about 30 joint ventures, most of them in Venezuela.

“We have come to Havana, Cuba, to say to the people of Venezuela, the people of Cuba, all the people of Latin America ... are going to continue working together, we came to ratify a strategic, historic alliance that transcends time, that is more a brotherhoo­d than an alliance,” Maduro said at a signing ceremony in Havana’s main convention centre.

Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader, told reporters he met with former Cuban leader Fidel Castro, 86, for five hours on Saturday, “rememberin­g Comandante Chavez, rememberin­g that those two built this relationsh­ip.”

Maduro narrowly won an April 14 election to replace Chavez, who died on March 5 after a long battle with cancer.

He ran basically as a Chavez surrogate who would continue his socialist policies both at home and abroad, including a close relationsh­ip with Cuba and Castro, whom Chavez considered his political mentor.

But his election opponent, Henrique Capriles, scored political points by criticisin­g the alliance with Cuba, which combined with serious economic problems facing Venezuela.

Cuba receives an estimated 110,000 barrels a day of Venezuelan oil in exchange for money and the services of some 44,000 Cubans, most of them medical personnel, in Venezuela.

In 2000, Cuba and Venezuela created an intergover­nmental commission that holds annual meetings to develop joint projects

in a wide range of areas, among them healthcare, education, culture and economics.

Cuban President Raul Castro, who spoke only briefly at the ceremony, said that along with the 51 projects, they had agreed on memorandum of understand­ing for the developmen­t and adoption of a “bilateral economic agenda” for the next five years.

 ?? — Reuters ?? BROTHERHOO­D Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, left, and his Cuban counterpar­t Raul Castro meet in the Revolution Palace in Havana, on Saturday.
— Reuters BROTHERHOO­D Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, left, and his Cuban counterpar­t Raul Castro meet in the Revolution Palace in Havana, on Saturday.
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