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Dissidents
play down chances of imminent change in Cuba
By Isabel Sanchez
AFP
HAVANA
Petroleumworld.com
08 09 06
Cuban dissidents Tuesday played down chances of imminent change, as
authorities insisted the communist leadership is alive and well after
the ailing President Fidel Castro temporarily ceded power.
"It is the same government. I believe there is no transition. Simply
put, Fidel Castro is sick and has delegated his functions to the number
two," said Hilda Molina, a dissident who for the past decade has
sought authorization to leave the country.
But the US administration acknowledged it was stepping up planning for
the eventuality of political change in Cuba, which was ruled by Castro
for almost 48 years and is now officially in the hands of his brother
Raul.
"There are drafts and people are trying to think about what is
going to happen should there be a change in the political situation
in Cuba," said White House spokesman Tony Snow.
Cuban authorities have gone all out over the past few days to convince
the island's citizens that Castro is well on his way to recovery and
that the ruling communist party is in top shape.
They have said Castro would be back on the job within months, or possibly
weeks, but have shed no light on the exact condition of the bearded
leader, who turns 80 on Sunday.
"They say the former ruler is recovering, but we don't know what
he is recovering from, we don't know what illness, because it is a state
secret," said Marta Beatriz Roque, a leading Cuban dissident.
This, she says has left Cuba in its "usual abnormal normality,"
with the situation remaining calm but residents in the dark about what
is going on behind the closed doors of Castro's inner sanctum.
Cuba-watchers in Miami are convinced Castro's days at the helm of the
Caribbean island nation are over and that at best he could return in
a ceremonial role.
Castro announced on July 31 that he had temporarily ceded power to Raul
Castro, 75, his brother, designated successor and defense minister.
"The Commander is recovering," said Aleida Guevara, the daughter
of Argentine-born Ernesto "Che" Guevara who fought the 1959
Cuban revolution alongside Castro.
She insisted that even the day Castro "is no longer with us, the
people will continue to move forward, because that's what they decided
a long time ago."
"But he will still be active for a while, and the most important
is he will always be at the side of his people," she said.
Neither of the two Castro brothers have appeared in public since the
July 31 announcement.
While dissidents are pessimistic about chances the transfer of power
to the hardliner Raul would bring about change in the near future, Roque
stressed this did not mean the opposition had given up.
"We won't move backwards. We remain where we are, with caution.
If we did not hope for change, we would not work for it," she told
AFP.
The US State Department has warned that the transfer to authority to
Raul must not become permanent, saying that would just mean one dictator
swapped for another.
Costa Rican President and Nobel Peace laureate Oscar Arias took a similar
stance, urging Cuban authorities to stage elections for Castro's succession.
He planned to ask Cuban Vice President Carlos Lage to pass on the message
to Raul Castro, but said he canceled the planned meeting after Lage
sought to limit the scope of the talks.
Arias announced earlier he would write to tell Raul Castro "that
if he wants to inherit power, he should consult the Cuban people."
bur-pfm/ddl
AFP 08 2333 GMT 08 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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