Fidel Castro Still Running The Show
But Cubans Ask Why Neither Castro Has Made An Appearance Since Surgery
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Play CBS Video Video What Is Castro's Condition? Though the Cuban government insists that Fidel Castro is recuperating and in stable conditions, many Cubans and exiles in the United States aren't so sure. Byron Pitts reports.
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Video Castro Remains Hospitalized Speculation about Fidel Castro's condition is swirling. As Aleen Sirgany reports, many in the Cuban exile community are celebrating his illness as a step closer to freedom for the island nation.
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Video Life After Fidel Castro Only On The Web: With Fidel Castro's brother stepping in for the ill Cuban leader, what does the White House think about the situation? Byron Pitts reports from Miami.
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Castro has had a special fondness for Elian Gonzalez seen here on his 12th birthday in Dec. 2005 whose dad, Juan Miguel Gonzalez (right) won the fight to have him sent from Florida back to Cuba. (AP)
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People celebrate and wave a Cuban flag in Miami's Little Havana neighborhood after word spread that Cuban President Fidel Castro temporarily relinquished power to his brother Raul due to intestinal illness, Monday, July 31, 2006. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)
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To most Cubans, Fidel Castro is the only president they have ever known. Above: a 1950s vintage taxi in Havana, Nov. 2005, passes a billboard with Castro's face and the message: "We are doing well." (AP)
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Cuban President Fidel Castro, left, with his brother, Defense Minister Raul Castro, in Havana in December 2003 file photo. Raul is filling in at least temporarily as president and party leader as Fidel recuperates from surgery. (Getty Images)
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Interactive Fidel Castro And Cuba Find out more about the communist country and the fiery leader who led the Cuban Revolution.
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Fast Facts Cuba Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Interactive Gitmo Tribunals Detainees on trial, photos and a history of the naval base.
Raul Castro remained out of public view two days after the temporary leadership change was announced. The state news media's focus remained solely on the elder Castro and his recovery, creating uncertainty about who was really in charge.
"The revolution will continue while Fidel recovers," proclaimed Juventud Rebelde, the Communist youth newspaper. "Fidel, get well," read a front-page headline in the Communist Party daily Granma.
Parliament Speaker Ricardo Alarcon told the New York-based independent radio show Democracy Now! that Castro was "very alive and very alert" when the men spoke Tuesday. Other than that, there was no new information about Castro's health. State television has broadcast no new images of either brother since the handover was announced.
The average Cuban seems to know that something is up. People want to know why there hasn't been a single public appearance by Raul Castro, reports CBS News correspondent Byron Pitts.
"He should have appeared by now," one man in Cuba told Pitts. "People are concerned."
It was unclear why Raul Castro had not appeared. While the elder Castro could be reluctant to relinquish power after his 47-year rule even temporarily to the brother he reportedly trusts more than anyone, state media also could be focusing solely on Fidel out of respect and habit. Raul, who has long deferred to his elder brother, could be keeping a low profile for the same reasons.
Asked in an interview with National Public Radio when Raul Castro would appear, Alarcon replied, "Thats our business."
The latest statement attributed to Fidel Castro was issued Tuesday night in an effort to assure the Cuban people all was well. It said his health was stable and the island was safe from potential attack.
Even so, there appeared to be an increase in police patrols in some working-class neighborhoods and in coastal areas that have seen civil unrest, such as during running power blackouts in the summer of 2005.
The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, the government's neighborhood watch groups, stepped up volunteer night patrols. Rapid Action Brigades, pro-government civilian groups used in the past to handle civil disturbances, were placed on standby.
Many Castro supporters expressed confidence Wednesday that the island's Communist system would remain intact, no matter what happens to the only ruler most Cubans have ever known.
"Either way, the revolution has to keep going," said retiree Santos Perez. "Fidel is a leader, but there are many leaders here, like his brother."
In Washington, Republican senators began drafting legislation to implement a plan by the White House to give $80 million over two years to Cuban dissidents fighting for democratic change.
Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, said President Bush told him the administration was caught off-guard by Castro's illness. "I think all of us can say we had no idea this was coming," he said.
He didn't elaborate, but the remarks underscored the scanty reliable intelligence the United States has on its Cold War foe, just 90 miles from Florida.
Cmdr. Jeff Carter of the U.S. Coast Guard, which patrols the water between Cuba and Florida, said there was no sign that Cubans were heading en masse to the United States. "We're not seeing anything nor are we seeing any going the other direction, from Florida," he said.
Gleeful celebrations erupted in Florida, where hundreds of thousands of Cuban exiles live, when Castro's illness was announced demonstrations Alarcon described as "vomit-provoking." Cubans expressed outrage Wednesday that people would celebrate an old man's infirmity.
"That's what you can expect from the type of trash that lives in the United States and cares nothing about this country," Havana housewife Oralis Delgado said.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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