Cuban President Raul Castro assured the public on Friday that a transfer of power to younger generations had begun, in a televised address marking the 60th anniversary of the start of the Cuban revolution.
Castro spoke in the city of Santiago, Cuba, where on July 26, 1953, the young Castro and a group of rebels, led by his brother and former Cuban president Fidel Castro, attacked the Moncada military barracks in a failed assault which sparked the movement that toppled the US-backed government of Cuban president Fulgencio Batista on Jan. 1, 1959.
At the time of the attack, Raul Castro was 22 and Fidel Castro 27.
Raul, now 82, who took over as president from his brother in 2008, spoke in front of the Moncada to 11,000 spectators, while a frail Fidel, who turns 87 next month, remained out of sight in Havana.
Raul left the traditional criticism of US policy to a host of foreign dignitaries who spoke before him, focusing instead on the history of the revolution and its succession, in what he termed as a “tranquil and serene” passing of the revolutionary torch, as well as Santiago’s efforts to recover from Hurricane Sandy, which slammed the island’s second city of 500,000 people in October last year.
The storm killed eleven people and damaged 50 percent of the housing in the city.
“Today, more than 70 percent of Cubans were born after the triumph of the revolution,” said Raul, dressed in military uniform and protected from a broiling sun by a floppy straw hat and sunglasses.
“There is a slow and orderly transfer of the leadership of the revolution to the new generations,” he said, adding that the changes were “based on the demonstrated preparation and capacity to maintain high the flags of the revolution and socialism.”
Raul has criticized his own generation for not preparing a succession, called for term limits and has made development of new leaders a priority since taking over for his brother, who ruled the country for nearly 50 years.
In February, 53-year-old Miguel Diaz-Canel was named Cuba’s first vice president and in line to succeed Raul, now in a second five-year-term as president.
Diaz-Canel, a member of the Party Politburo who worked his way up through the ranks over 30 years, was rarely seen on the national stage until this year. He did not take the podium at the event.
Raul Castro and 83-year-old Jose Ramon Machado Ventura remain the first and second secretaries respectively of the all-powerful Cuban Communist Party. Who will succeed them at the next Party Congress in 2016 is still not known.
Some Cubans were encouraged by Raul’s comments.
Yuleisy Carmenates, 30, a public health worker in Santiago, said that Castro offered “nothing new” in his speech, but “at the same time his words were encouraging for Santiago which needs as much encouragement as possible.”
Castro said that only about 52 percent of the housing damaged by the storm has been repaired.
“I expected something different, but after so many speeches by others it was difficult to say much more,” said Ramon Estrada.
Castro was preceded by the heads of state of Venezuela, Bolivia, Uruguay, Nicaragua and four small Caribbean island countries, as well as the Ecuadoran foreign minister of foreign affairs, all of whom praised Cubans and their leaders for maintaining the country’s independence in the face of US sanctions.
“The people of Cuba are responsible that today Latin America has stood up,” Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said, opening the televised event in Santiago that he called a prelude to a regional summit in January in Havana.
“The Cuban Revolution is the mother of the anti-imperialist revolutions of the region and world,” Bolivian President Evo Morales said at the podium next.
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