/ 18 August 2006

Raul Castro says Fidel is recovering gradually

Cuban President Fidel Castro is recovering gradually, Raul Castro said in an interview published on Friday, his first public remarks since his ailing older brother temporarily handed him power last month.

Raul Castro (75) thanked the doctors and others who have attended his brother ”with an unsurpassable professionalism and, above all, with much love and dedication”.

”This has been a very important factor in Fidel’s progressive recovery,” he said in an interview published on Friday in the Communist Party newspaper Granma.

Cuba’s government announced on July 31 that Fidel Castro, who turned 80 on August 13, underwent surgery for intestinal bleeding and delegated government functions provisionally to his brother Raul, head of the Cuban armed forces and his designated successor.

The appointment sparked speculation that Fidel Castro’s 47-year rule on the island just 145km from Florida in the United States might be ending. Neither Raul nor Fidel Castro appeared in public until August 13 when Raul appeared on state television. Video images of Fidel were released a day later.

”As a point of fact, I am not used to making frequent appearances in public, except at times when it is required,” Raul Castro said in the Granma interview.

He said he was not concerned with ”those in other countries who entertain themselves by speculating about if I am going to appear on television or in the papers or not”.

He said many of his activities as defence minister were best kept private. ”Moreover, I have always been discreet, that is my way, and in passing I will clarify that I am thinking of continuing in that way.”

Castro said he was gratified by the support expressed from around the world, and expressed scorn for those who had expected chaos in Cuba.

”Absolute tranquillity is reigning in the country,” he said.

Cuba mobilised its defence forces in the hours after Castro’s illness and handover of power were announced, Raul Castro said.

”We could not rule out the risk of somebody going crazy, or even crazier, within the US government,” he said. — Reuters