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Castro led Cuba with statesmanship, dignity: Pakistan

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Castro led Cuba with statesmanship, dignity: Pakistan
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ISLAMABAD: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz has expressed condolence on the sad demise of former Cuban President Fidel Castro.

“We have received the sad news of passing away of the former Cuban President, Fidel Castro, with deep sense of grief and sorrow,” a statement by Sartaz Aziz said.

“On behalf of the government and the people of Pakistan, I would like to convey heartfelt condolences to the government and the people of Cuba on this irreparable loss.

“Late President Fidel Castro steered his nation through numerous daunting challenges with statesmanship, honour and dignity.

“Pakistan-Cuba relationship took roots under his able leadership and has flourished ever since. The late President will be missed by his friends and admirers in Pakistan for times to come.

“We wish the departed soul of late Fidel Castro to rest in eternal peace,” he added. – SAMAA
https://www.samaa.tv/pakistan/2016/11/castro-led-cuba-with-statesmanship-dignity-pakistan/
 
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Fidel Castro survived 50 years of assassination plots


Published on Nov 26, 2016
Garrett Tenney reports on some of the former Cuban leader's close calls with death.

Fidel Castro Documentary Full - Fidel Castro Declassified - History Channel documentary

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Published on Sep 28, 2015
Fidel Castro Documentary Full - Fidel Castro Declassified - History Channel documentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-KfA...

FIDEL CASTRO, perhaps the most important revolutionary to ever live, head of the cuban revolution and of Cuba as its President for more than a century. He survived assasination plots from the CIA and USA, and survived the demise of the Soviet Union to rule his country longer than any other dictator alive.

A life certainly worth exploring through the best Fidel Castro documentary full from the History Channel. Fidel Castro Decalssified,

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Fidel Castro Biography

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Published on Jun 27, 2015
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This is a beautifully made documentary packed with rare archive footage and photographs. It shows Castro's childhood, his recklessness as a youth, his blossoming talents at the University of Havana and then his swift and complex ride to lawyer, jailbird, guerilla, politician and revolutionary. Adored and deplored, Castro's life makes compelling viewing.
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African Union offers its condolences to the people of Cuba

http://cctv-africa.com/2016/11/26/african-union-offers-its-condolences-to-the-people-of-cuba/


The African Union Commission has expressed its condolences for the people and government of Cuba after the death of Fidel Castro.

It says Castro will remain in African hearts and minds because of the solidarity he showed with the continent.

CCTV’s Girum Chala has more from the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa.
 
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Certainly a Statesman, Successfully outlived 10 American Presidents, Tackled Countless CIA Assassinations, Worked for the People, in the end You don't need Democracy to deliver, its all about Will & Honesty without any greed...
 
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SUNDAY, NOV. 27


MA’AN NEWS AGENCY


Latest News

From Palestine to Cuba: Palestinian leaders remember the late Fidel Castro
NOV. 26, 2016 4:24 P.M. (UPDATED: NOV. 26, 2016 9:12 P.M.)
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Arafat and Castro developed close diplomatic and personal ties, with Castro inviting Arafat to Cuba at least eight times. Palestinian authorities have noted that during each visit Castro "always welcomed [Arafat] like he was a head of state."

Cuba publicly condemned Israel at the United Nations for the first time during the aftermath of the Six-Day War in 1967, when Israeli forces launched a military campaign that resulted in the ongoing occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. According to Al Jazeera, Cuba and Nicaragua were the only Latin American countries to grant the PLO full diplomatic status, with Cuba severing ties completely with the Israeli state several years later.

Following the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territory, Cuba also began to provide military support to the Fatah movement, and eventually extended his support to Palestinian popular and democratic fronts that became central to the resistance movements during the first Palestinian intifada.

In addition, Castro co-sponsored UN resolution 3379 that was passed in 1975, which stated that "Zionism is a form of racism and racial discrimination." However, the resolution was eventually repealed in 1991.

In 2014, Castro, along with several other Latin American countries, directly spoke out against Israel’s most recent offensive on the besieged Gaza Strip, which left some 1,462 Palestinians dead, a third of whom were children, calling the assault a “new, repugnant form of fascism” in a column for a local Cuban newspaper.

“Why does the government of this country (Israel) think that the world will be impervious to this macabre genocide that is being committed today against the Palestinian people?” it read.

However, others have criticized the leader for his longstanding rule over Cuba and what critics claim was the concerted stifling of political dissent, as Cuban Americans in Miami flocked to the streets to celebrate the leader’s death, with one critic commenting on Twitter: “Rest in Peace for education, healthcare, and racial equality for the people. Rest in Pain for starving, murdering, and silencing them.”

Despite criticisms, Castro has remained an icon for left-wing movements and underdeveloped countries which saw the leader as a voice of the oppressed who could stand up against destructive American policies, while instilling hope into independence movements around the world throughout the anti-colonial rebellions of the 1960s and 70s.
 
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Asia & Pacific
Castro’s death a reminder in China of changed communist axis- U.S views

https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...f57518-b3c6-11e6-bc2d-19b3d759cfe7_story.html


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FILE - In this July 22, 2014 file photo, Cuba’s former President Fidel Castro, right, greets China’s President Xi Jinping in Havana, Cuba. Castro, who led a rebel army to victory in Cuba, embraced Soviet-style communism and defied the power of 10 U.S. presidents during his half century rule, died at age 90 on Friday, Nov 25, 2016. Viewed from the world’s largest communist country, Castro’s death is a reminder of how the communist axis has changed beyond recognition since the ideologically charged era when the bearded revolutionary cut a dashing figure on the world stage alongside leaders like Mao Zedong. (Alex Castro, File/Associated Press)
By Gerry Shih | AP November 26 at 7:35 AM

BEIJING — In the shadow of east Beijing’s soaring glass skyscrapers, elderly retirees still speak nostalgically about their Cuban brothers-in-arm, faraway comrades bound by communist solidarity.

But in central Beijing’s halls of power, Cuba is perhaps seen these days as something less romantic: a market for China’s booming private-sector exports.

Viewed from the world’s largest communist country, Fidel Castro’s death is a reminder of how the communist axis has changed beyond recognition since the ideologically charged era when the bearded revolutionary cut a dashing figure on the world stage alongside leaders like Mao Zedong.

After establishing diplomatic relations in 1960, the countries’ fortunes diverged over the ensuing decades: China began adopting free-market reforms in the 1980s and morphed into an economic powerhouse — Communist mostly in name — while Castro persisted with Marxism, Cuba’s economy hobbling on under U.S. sanctions.

Today, the two countries’ leaders frequently nod to their shared ideological history, but bilateral relations revolve more around jointly developed beach resorts or Chinese telecoms investments. In a September visit, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang offered to support Cuba’s development as a “comrade and brother,” while Castro congratulated China on the growth it has achieved and sought assistance in agricultural technology.


At around $2.2 billion a year, trade between the two countries is dwarfed by China’s commerce with the rest of Latin America, which totals $236 billion, according to Chinese state media. But China is Cuba’s top creditor and second-largest trading partner after Venezuela, and ties have deepened swiftly.

Chinese refrigerators are found in Cuban homes, China’s “Yutong” brand buses ply Cuba’s highways and Chinese Unionpay cards are accepted at Cuban ATMs. In December, Air China launched a direct flight from Beijing to Havana largely to serve burgeoning Chinese tourists looking to spend holidays in the island nation.

“After China deepened reform and opened up in early 1990s, the development of bilateral ties between China and Cuba did not focus too much on ideology,” said Zhu Feng, dean of the Institute of International Studies at Nanjing University. “Economic development and cooperation, which were beneficial to economic and social development in both countries, became more important.”

Geopolitical tectonics have realigned in other ways since Castro’s prime. Cuba restored diplomatic relations with the United States last year after a half-century freeze, a rapprochement that China viewed warily. Meanwhile, Washington lifted an arms embargo against Vietnam, another erstwhile communist enemy, and has backed Hanoi in maritime disputes against neighboring China.

North Korea remains a communist holdout, but the country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, has increasingly exasperated China, which is collaborating with the United States to try to halt its erstwhile ally’s nuclear program.

Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at Renmin University in Beijing, said the 90-year-old Castro’s death had been anticipated and there will be no material change in China-Cuba relations, given that he relinquished power to his brother Raul years ago.

Still, Castro’s passing is being mourned with a deep and genuine sense of nostalgia in China, even if he feels like an icon from a bygone era.


Chinese President Xi Jinping sent a telegram to Cuba on Saturday mourning the loss of a “dear comrade and true friend” of the Chinese people who made “immortal contributions to the development of socialism around the world.”

Chinese state television rolled out hours of historical footage. Voiceovers highlighted Castro’s cigar-chomping charisma, ideological conviction and seeming “invincibility,” while denouncing U.S. intelligence operations against him and crippling U.S. sanctions against his country.

China’s official Xinhua News Agency, meanwhile, eulogized a man who “resisted the American superpower for half a century” with the headline: “Old Soldiers Never Die.”

From Jiang Zemin to Xi, who frequently reaches for Marxist-Leninist symbolism and language, generations of Chinese leaders have displayed an affinity for the distant ally at a personal level. Xi made a visit to Cuba in 2014 and, as he told an audience last year, sipped a mojito at Ernest Hemingway’s favored bar.

Castro, likewise, was always greeted warmly in Beijing, and many older Chinese remember the 1995 visit when, decked in his tell-tale green fatigues, he stepped up to Mao’s memorial in Tiananmen Square and snapped a military salute. Even in his later years, Castro was pictured wrapping Chinese leaders in bear hugs, eliciting surprise and delight from his hosts.

In the alleyways near Beijing’s glittering World Trade Center complex, not far from Cartier and Versace boutiques, elderly residents on Saturday pondered the legacy of a man who loomed large in their youths.

“He was a good person,” said a 78-year-old retired railway worker surnamed Zhang. “Cuba is our friend. I still remember joining the anti-U.S. parade to support Cuba in my 20s. The sugar we had was from Cuba.”

Liang Yongxing, 60-year-old retired civil servant, said he was astonished by the news of Castro’s death, calling it a momentous occasion for the international order.

“Aside from North Korea, I think he was the last person who clung to pure socialism,” he said.

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It is true, he was one of the most influential leaders of the time.

For him to take his small island of a country and stand up to the "superpower" was quite spectacular.

I wonder why communism never gained ground over here....
 
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It is true, he was one of the most influential leaders of the time.

For him to take his small island of a country and stand up to the "superpower" was quite spectacular.

I wonder why communism never gained ground over here....
it did. communist party of pakistan and its students wing democratic students federation were the leaders of political protest in the 50s in Pakistan, then ayub khan had them wiped out. still the survivors made their way into the newly formed socialist PPP (1967) and after winning elections Bhutto's first cabinet carried out a lot of socialist reforms. had zia not taken over im pretty confident Pakistan would have been the world's largest Islamic Socialist Democratic state. a western imperialist nightmare we would've been for sure. God damn that wretched Zia.
 
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...and ruled his country as his own personal totalitarian fiefdom for 49 years; no free elections, no free press, no criticism of the government allowed, etc., despite his having promised all of those things. He enslaved his people for half a century and they remain so under his brother. And what did he do for Cuba? Hundreds of hours long speeches that no one dare criticises. Lot's of empty rallying to patriotism and of course, the never-gets-old excuse of vicious dictators the world over; "All our problems are the fault of the imperialist Yankee!" Oh, and he did this for Cuba as well; before communism............and after communism.

cuba-before-and-after.jpg
 
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A person ruling for 50 years and destroying his country's economy is a despot, not a statesman. Suppressing individual freedom, using firing squad to kill thousands, interning gays just to prolong his rule is anything but dignified. Good Riddance.
 
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...and ruled his country as his own personal totalitarian fiefdom for 49 years; no free elections, no free press, no criticism of the government allowed, etc., despite his having promised all of those things. He enslaved his people for half a century and they remain so under his brother. And what did he do for Cuba? Hundreds of hours long speeches that no one dare criticises. Lot's of empty rallying to patriotism and of course, the never-gets-old excuse of vicious dictators the world over; "All our problems are the fault of the imperialist Yankee!" Oh, and he did this for Cuba as well; before communism............and after communism.

cuba-before-and-after.jpg

The sanctions were the main reason for suffering for the cuban people not necessarily the mode of governanace

Sanctions on trade of a small island community that is hit with hurricanes and storms on continuous basis was quite a criminal act

Patriotism of a large country citizen cannot claim to be greater then Patriotism of a small island country. He/She value their own country ideals and flag as much as you love your country

  • The idealogy of Sanctions has only created more Chaos and suffering, crused economy of iraq or sacterian violence and now ISIS all product of sanctions

Should small Island continue with Communism SURE why not ? It divides wealth equally between the people on their island , why should they blindly copy a model that does not work for their society?

They have something called border which states clearly where their country begins and they are 100% right to implement any form of government their hearts desires
 
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We as a nation dont have fraction of the dignity Cubans had in holding to their ideology, wrong or right, and standing up to disproportionate challenge they had to confront.
 
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Sanctions on trade of a small island community that is hit with hurricanes and storms on continuous basis was quite a criminal act

By what possible twisted logic, do you believe that my country, any country, YOUR country, should be forced to trade with another country if it does not wish to?

BTW, Castro's Cuba traded freely with countries all over the world and has belonged to the WTO for decades. Cuba's economy is a trash heap because that is what communism does.

Shopping in Warsaw under communism.
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Shopping in Warsaw today.
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Interesting share I suppose a good read for me to study the impact of sanctions on economy for cuba

  • China has done well for a Communist state
  • As is case with Viet Nam

Its is intresting when you view communism on a small unit i.e Family seems very normal

  • Father earns cash gets food , equally divides the food to his family of 5 people every one happy

Chinese form of government based on social worker class members (1-3 million strong) certainly is a very strong system now that it is in full Motion after 40 years of fine tuning

I normally find a strong , resentment of Communism or socialist system for some reason in USA
TOP 5% do control most of cash now or corporatons who no one knows who owns them

I feel that Democratic system only the 5% have right to become leaders , and other people follow a socialist / communist approach on smaller units in family (i.e mom/dad works and then money /food is distributed to family equally)
 
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