HAVANA, Sept. 5, 2006

Castro: Most Critical Moment Is Over

Cuban Leader Says He Lost 41 Pounds After Surgery

  • An undated photo of a gaunt Fidel Castro during his convalescence. He's 80.

    An undated photo of a gaunt Fidel Castro during his convalescence. He's 80.  (AP Photo/Granma)

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(CBS/AP)  Fidel Castro said in a statement Tuesday that he has lost more than 41 pounds since he had intestinal surgery but added that the "most critical moment" was behind him.

"Today I am recovering at a satisfactory rhythm," said the statement published in the Communist Party daily Granma, which was accompanied by new photographs of the 80-year-old Castro.

He said that he just recently had the last stitches from his surgery removed.

"I can affirm that the most critical moment has been left behind."

The statement was accompanied by 10 photographs of Castro during his convalescence, in all of them sitting up and wearing either short-sleeved navy blue or light-blue pajamas. In several he is reading or writing.

"Ever since some new video of Castro was broadcast by Cuban television last Friday, Cubans have been commenting on how thin he looked," reports CBS News producer Portia Siegelbaum in Havana. "Tuesday's message confirms their impression but the fact that he lost 41 pounds in just 'a few days' should also indicate to them just how ill he has been."

Most of the pictures show the leader from the waist up, although one shows his whole body as he sits in a rocking chair with slippers on his feet, reading what looks to be a newspaper.

In another Castro holds up a broadsheet proof of a new book written from a series of interviews he gave to French journalist Ignacio Ramonet, which he said he was reviewing during his recovery.

"In the coming days I will be receiving distinguished visitors," he added, apparently referring to some of the heads of state and government who will traveling to Havana for a summit of nonaligned nations.

"This doesn't mean that every activity will be immediately accompanied by video or photographic images, although news will be provided of every one," the statement said.

The Cuban leader announced on July 31 that he was stepping aside as president to recover from the operation. It remains unclear when he had the surgery.

He said he was temporarily turning over power to his 75-year-old brother Raul, the defense minister. It was the first time in 47 years of rule that Castro had stepped aside, even temporarily.

In the weeks since, the nature of his surgery and his specific ailment have been treated as a state secret.

"All of us must understand that it is not convenient to systematically offer information, nor give out images of my health situation," Castro added. "All of us must also understand realistically that the complete recovery time, whether we like it or not, will be prolonged.

"At this moment I am not in a hurry, and no one should be in a hurry. The country is marching and moving ahead," he said.

The government has not announced whether Fidel or Raul will represent the country during next week's summit.

"Although you can't entirely rule out a cameo appearance before the heads of state gathering ends, it seems less likely at this point," says Siegelbaum.

As host of the summit, Castro assumes the presidency of the Movement for the next three years. This is his second shot at the post. Cuba hosted the sixth NOAL Summit in 1979.


©MMVI CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by ronniehm September 5, 2006 4:35 PM EDT
You America-haters are weird. Who's invading Cuba? Looks like more Cubans coming this way than Americans going that way.

Die, Fidel, die. Give freedom to those in Cuban jails who wait for your last breath.
Reply to this comment
by kaelio September 5, 2006 3:43 PM EDT
The US interest in Cuba is to exploit the vast natural resources that Cuba is sitting on. It has nothing to do with giving the Cuban people a "democracy." It's purely about money for US interests. Leave Cuba alone and let it make it's own way in the world. The US has no right to invade yet another country.
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by ronniehm September 5, 2006 2:23 PM EDT
Yeah, that's why so many Americans swim to Cuba. Die already, Fidel.
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by zykracosmos September 5, 2006 11:53 AM EDT
Bush has already asked for $80 million dollars to prepare for US meddling in Cuban affairs. Why is it that our government has such an obsession with controlling Cuba's destiny? Let's not forget what brought Castro in to power in the first place. It was because 90% of the land in Cuba was owned by foreign interests and the people worked for slave wages in the tobacco and sugarcane fields, while all profits went abroad. Havana was the capital for US mob interests, and the best job Cubans could get was to work as an entertainer for a casino. Castro's closure of Havana to the US mob was the main reason for the Bay of Pigs, as the mob played their debt card from Joe Kennedy for their support in getting John Kennedy elected by deliverying the unions. Now business interests are chopping at the bit to recover land in Cuba they claim they still hold title to, and other US corporations are also drooling at ways to exploit a newly "democratized" Cuba. Wouldn't it be funny if Bush's push for democracy in Cuba backfired the same way it has in Iraq and Palestine, and Cubans opted for a socialist democracy to keep foreign money from taking over again.
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