Reuters North American News Service, December 2nd, 2007
SANTIAGO, Cuba (Reuters) - Ailing Cuban leader Fidel
Castro was nominated Sunday for a seat in the National
Assembly, a sign he may not be planning to step down as head of
state despite struggling to recover from a long illness.
Castro, 81, handed over power temporarily to his brother
Raul 16 months ago after life-threatening stomach surgery and
he has not been since in public since. To formally remain
president he must be a deputy in the assembly.
To cries of "Viva Fidel" (Long live Fidel), municipal
councilors in Santiago raised their hands to unanimously
approve Castro's name on a slate of candidates for elections on
January 20 to Cuba's national parliament. Since 1976, Castro
has represented Santiago, the cradle of his revolution.
Castro turned Cuba into a communist state at the doorstep
of the United States after taking power in a guerrilla uprising
in 1959.
His illness last year forced him to step aside for the
first time since the revolution and allies say he was close to
death at one point. But his condition then improved and he
remains a power behind the scenes.
"During his convalescence he has continued to be actively
involved in the country's most important strategic decisions,"
a biography attached to Castro's candidacy said. Castro remains
intellectually active, writing about the most pressing problems
facing Cuba and the survival of the human species, it said.
In more than 60 columns published this year in Cuba's state
media, Castro has never mentioned the country's future with or
without him.
At its first session in March, the National Assembly must
ratify the country's top political jobs, a key meeting that
will settle speculation about Castro's possible retirement.
"The fact that he has been nominated as a candidate to the
National Assembly does not necessarily imply that he will be on
the Council of State (Cuba's top executive body)," a government
official said.
Castro has only appeared in official photographs and
pre-taped videos, looking frail and grayer, and it is not clear
whether he is strong enough to resume office. If he is too ill,
the assembly could formally appoint Raul Castro as successor.
Many Cubans expect Fidel Castro to retire to the role of
elder statesman similar to that played in later life by China's
Mao Zedong.
(Writing by Anthony Boadle, editing by Vicki Allen)
