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Castro recovering, not out of the picture-top aide
26 Jan 2007 03:25:47 GMT
Source: Reuters

HAVANA, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro, who dropped from public view six months ago after undergoing emergency surgery, is recovering and is still in charge of Cuba, a senior government official said on Thursday.

"He is still at the helm," Ricardo Alarcon, president of Cuba's National Assembly, told reporters.

Alarcon said the 80-year-old Cuban leader was out of sight because he was following strict doctor's instructions for his recovery "which is going very well."

Castro relinquished power for the first time since his 1959 revolution when he handed over government duties temporarily to his brother, Defense Minister Raul Castro on July 31.

Alarcon said the timing of Fidel Castro's return to public life would depend on his recovery and indicated that skeptics were in for a surprise.

Alarcon dismissed as "speculation by gossip mongers" a Spanish newspaper report that Castro had had a series of three failed operations on his large intestine since last July that caused severe infection.

El Pais newspaper, citing medical sources close to a Spanish surgeon who examined Castro in December, reported last week that the Cuban leader's prognosis was "very grave" because his surgery ran into complications after he chose a riskier operation to avoid a routine though uncomfortable colostomy.

Castro underwent initial surgery to stop intestinal bleeding caused by working too hard, the government said. Details of his condition are a state secret.

U.S. officials have said they suspect he has terminal cancer. But El Pais said he had surgery for diverticulitis, pouch-like sacks in the intestine that can become inflamed and infected.

Castro's main ally, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, said last week that his Cuban mentor was "fighting a battle for life."

On Wednesday, Chavez read a letter from Castro to the media, displaying Castro's signature as evidence that reports he was dying were false.

"We are really pleased, Fidel, with the news that we have received about your recovery," Chavez said.
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Members of Italy's Radical Party (R), including a national parliament member and a Euro Parliament deputy, join wives and other female relatives of 59 imprisoned Cuban dissidents outside a church in Havana March 18, 2007. The women, known as the "Ladies in White" promised on Sunday to fight on for their men's release, four years after they were jailed on charges of conspiring with the United States. The banner reads "freedom and no violence for Cuba".