Castro And Chavez Memorialize Che
Ailing Cuban Leader Calls Into Venezuelan President's Radio Program
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Play CBS Video Video Castro Makes Public Appearance "CBS News RAW": Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez visits Cuba and sings to Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Castro has not made a public appearance since he handed over power to his brother in July 2006.
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Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez hosts his weekly radio and television show "Alo, Presidente!" next to an image of Cuba's revolutionary leader Ernesto 'Che' Guevara, in Santa Clara, Cuba, Sunday, Oct. 14, 2007. Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro phoned Hugo Chavez during the broadcast of the show, minutes after Chavez aired a new videotape of their weekend meeting. (AP)
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Fidel Castro shakes hands with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in an Oct. 13, 2007 photo released by the Cuban government and published in the communist youth paper, "Rebel Youth." (www.juventudrebelde.cu)
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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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Photo Essay Castro Turns 80 The ailing leader has low-key 80th birthday celebration while the rest of Cuba honors their president.
Cubans were glued to their TV sets Sunday as new video of their elusive President Fidel Castro was aired, and they also got to hear his voice live and unedited for the first time in over a year as he spoke by phone with one of his strongest Latin American allies, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
Chavez is in Cuba to discuss bilateral agreements and to honor Argentine revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara on the 40th anniversary of his death by broadcasting his weekly Sunday television and radio program, Aló Presidente, from Santa Clara, 167 miles east of Havana, where Guevara's remains are entombed in a mausoleum.
"Fidel's not well but he's better than the last time we saw him on video," said one harried mother preparing her three children for their return to boarding school Monday. "Only he spoke so slow, very slow, even though he was coherent," she said uneasily after watching the tape and listening to the one-hour phone conversation that took place during Aló Presidente, carried live by Cuban television.
The 17-minute video was edited from, what government sources say, was a four-hour meeting between Castro and Chavez in Havana on Saturday. It shows the two seated in the same nondescript room where the Cuban leader has been receiving a select group of foreign dignitaries since undergoing intestinal surgery in July 2006.
Castro is wearing a track suit jacket in the Cuban colors red, white and blue, over dark colored pajamas and sitting on a cushion on a hard backed chair.
Castro was lucid, animated and appeared to be thoroughly enjoying his conversation with Chavez as the two discussed Guevara's revolutionary exploits.
"He looked a lot more comfortable talking with Chavez than he did in the conversation with Randy Alonso (a Cuban TV commentator)," said a mechanic, referring to a videotape that aired September 21.
Before ducking under the hood of a car, he added, "Fidel obviously feels he has nothing to fear from Chavez. The guy isn't going to make him look bad and he inspires him."
The sampling of opinions also reveals that Cubans are getting accustomed to the idea that their long-time leader will never return to his former hyperactive public life.
"His era is over. We won't see more of him than we saw today, just variations of it," was one comment. Another Castro supporter described it this way: "We have to resign ourselves to the fact that he won't be able to resume his life as before."
Nevertheless, several people expressed relief at finally hearing him speak live. "It's not the same as seeing him in an edited video. You know they chose the parts where he looks and sounds the best. They're not going to put on the bad parts," said a twenty-four year old man.
Castro has not appeared in public in the 14 months since he fell ill with intestinal bleeding. Castro called in to one of Chavez's programs broadcast from Venezuela in February and the pair chatted for more than a half hour.
Instead of seeing him constantly giving long speeches on TV or at public rallies, Cubans have come to expect commentaries, a steady stream of them, in the local press penned by Castro. His topics range from environmental issues to the Iraq war and almost always include criticism of U.S. President George Bush.
In his good humored phone conversation Sunday with Chavez, Castro joked, "We are the axis of evil," the sobriquet President Bush bestowed on North Korea, Iran and pre-war Iraq. It has been also used by others in Washington to refer to the progressive alliance Chavez, with Castro's blessing, has been forging in Latin America that includes Bolivia and Ecuador.
As the two men spoke of Guevara's plans to spread revolution on that continent 40 years ago, Castro told Chavez, "The circumstances are more propitious than ever for the flowering of those ideas of revolution that Che spoke of."
Castro did not comment on his health at any point in the video or phone conversation, but Chavez regretfully noted more than once that the Cuban leader is no longer able to travel. However, he also told Castro, "You will never die. You remain forever on this continent and with these nations and this revolution is more alive today than ever, and Fidel, you know it. We will take charge of continuing to fan the flame."
At the end of the five-hour program, the Venezuela President set off for port city of Cienfuegos on Cuba's southern coast, where his government has been reconstructing a major oil refinery. Chavez told the audience of top Venezuelan and Cuban leaders with him in Santa Clara that he envisions Cienfuegos becoming an important petrochemical processing center.
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- I''''m suprised I''''m even allowed to type this message.
Castro and Chavez are heroes of humanity!!!
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Posted by bizzzz at 03:27 PM : Oct 15, 2007
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I am surpised you have not hightailed your arse to cuba or valenzuela yet.. - Reply to this comment
- I''m with Sean Penn, Kevin Spacey,Danny Glover and Michael Moore. These guys are great leaders. Their countries are Paradise. Anyone who thinks differently is crazy.
Castro and Chavez have done so much good for their people. It''s George Bush who is the dictator. It''s George Bush whose oppressing me everyday. I''m suprised I''m even allowed to type this message.
Castro and Chavez are heroes of humanity!!! - Reply to this comment
- "The countries represented by these men have devolved into third world countries" Really. I wasn''t aware that taking a country''s literacy rate from 30% to 98% was devolution. The US has a higher infant mortality rate than Cuba. And I can''t feel sorry for rich people whose lands are nationalized. Land is a national resource. If one man has a lot of land that he doesn''t use and his neighbors are starving than they have more of a right to that land then the owner. I know most Americans have been brainwashed into respecting land deeds more than human life but that''s just sick. Capitalists steal land from the people who it rightfully belongs to and then pay them next to nothing to work the land and then charge them rent just to live there. This is the biggest con game in world history and people need to wake up and stop buying into it.
- Reply to this comment
- "The countries represented by these men have devolved into third world countries" Really. I wasn''t aware that taking a country''s literacy rate from 30% to 98% was devolution. The US has a higher infant mortality rate than Cuba. And I can''t feel sorry for rich people whose lands are nationalized. Land is a national resource. If one man has a lot of land that he doesn''t use and his neighbors are starving than they have more of a right to that land then the owner. I know most Americans have been brainwashed into respecting land deeds more than human life but that''s just sick. Capitalists steal land from the people who it rightfully belongs to and then pay them next to nothing to work the land and then charge them rent just to live there. This is the biggest con game in world history and people need to wake up and stop buying into it.
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- Listen all, Chavez is a thug leader, thief. Why? I friend of mine, who worked his way to success in Venezuela, now 70yrs old, decided to buy farm land for himself..He''s well off. The day he signed the sale papers and payed cash, he went to check his new property to find red shirted men 200 of them, taking over his land. These men are Chavez''s men...STEALING THE PROPERTY from my friend..and he could do nothing about it. He''s a crook, communist thug. Let the truth be known.
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- Che was a monster, just like Castro, Chavez, and Hitler. Sure, you can find people extolling the brilliance of Mein Kampf, but those are about the only people who are going to pretend these men are misunderstood ideologues. As a Cuban whose family was killed by Castro, whose familial land was confiscated by Batista before him, I laugh at all the American apologetic intellectuals--there''s more to life than graying every black and white issue, guys. There really is black and and there really is white in the world, and communistic mass-murderers really are sinister people. The countries represented by these men have devolved into third world countries, and no, its not from embargos. Anyway, I''ll stop now, but don''t be a pawn...
- Reply to this comment
- also...El Che wasnt killed.......he was murdered.
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- lets see you try and overthrow AMERIKKKAN mafia thugs without killing or violence...see how far that gets you...people with narrow minds and small brains will NEVER realize that Che''s life represents human truths............HASTA LA VICTORIA SIEMPRE !!!!! theres a reason why even his enemies respect the man. theres a strong reason why he still remains alive today....and will continue to do so.....
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- Pity the other two leaders of communist countries weren''t there for the party. I thought they all stuck together?
- Reply to this comment
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