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Raul Castro consolidates power in Cuba

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 30, 2008 at 12:51 PM

Raul Castro consolidates power in Cuba
Tue 29 Apr 2008, 16:58 GMT
By Marc Frank

HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban President Raul Castro has reorganized the 
Communist Party's leader****p and consolidated his power as he pushes 
through reforms two months after succeeding his ailing brother Fidel
Castro.

In a speech to the party's Central Committee published by Cuba's 
official media on Tuesday, the younger Castro announced a new 
seven-member executive committee would preside over the all-powerful 
Political Bureau.

He also called a party Congress in late 2009, the first in more than a 
decade, to discuss the future of socialism in Cuba.

Since he was installed as Cuba's first new leader in almost half a 
century in February, the 76-year-old Raul Castro has lifted a series of 
restrictions on daily life in Cuba, from owning cell phones and buying 
computers to entering tourist hotels.

He has also decentralized agriculture and given greater autonomy to 
private farmers, commuted the death sentences of common criminals and in 
early March signed two im****tant United Nations human rights agreements 
long opposed by his brother.

All the changes are aimed at strengthening communist rule.

"The pragmatism of Raul Castro will continue to be the keynote of his 
approach, and reforms will continue to be introduced, and greater 
efficiency and productivity increasingly demanded," said John Kirk, a 
historian at Dalhousie University in Canada.

"This promises to be a period of significant change, designed to shore 
up the revolutionary process while using radically different 
strategies," Kirk said.

FIDEL CASTRO APPOINTMENTS ENDED

Raul Castro's announcement of a Political Bureau executive committee and 
its members was a first since the party's founding in 1975, though an 
informal one may have existed around Fidel Castro, who took power in a 
1959 revolution.

The committee is made up of Raul Castro's most trusted confidants with 
an average age of more than 70 and decades of service to the Castro 
brothers.

Raul Castro will lead the committee and the six other members are the 
same men picked as the vice presidents of the Council of State, the 
government's top executive body, when he took over as president in
February.

Cubans, many of whom remain loyal to Fidel Castro, have responded 
positively to the changes initiated by his brother, insisting they are 
simply a continuation and strengthening of the revolution.

Others see a marked change in leader****p style since Raul Castro took
over.

"The period of inventing solutions, of improvising is over," Havana 
handyman Jorge Hidalgo said.

Raul Castro said a series of appointments made by Fidel Castro when he 
was sidelined by illness in July 2006, were no longer valid.

"The accords we have approved put an end to the provisional period begun 
on July 31, 2006 with the proclamation of the Commander in Chief," he
said.

Fidel Castro, 81, still holds the powerful position of first secretary 
of the Communist Party, although Raul Castro's speech left no doubt that 
he is now fully in charge.

"The Raulista model is in part the institutionalization of the 
Revolution," said Frank Mora, a national security and Cuba expert at the 
National War College in Wa****ngton. "Moving away from voluntarism, 
mobilization, and improvisation that characterized Fidelismo toward more 
regular, predictable and bureaucratic forms of governance."

Fidel Castro has not appeared in public since he underwent intestinal 
surgery from which he has never fully recovered. His condition and 
whereabouts are state secrets.

Fidel Castro recently wrote that he is consulted on all im****tant 
matters and retains great influence over decisions.

(Editing by Anthony Boadle and Kieran Murray)

http://africa.reuters.com/world/news/usnN29317974.html
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Raul Castro consolidates power in Cuba
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-30 12:51:46 

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