The ashes of Fidel Castro begin a
four-day journey across Cuba Wednesday to his final resting place,
retracing the late communist leader’s revolution victory tour of 1959.
The “caravan of freedom” will leave from
Havana, making symbolic stops along the 950-kilometer (590-mile) trek
that will end in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba over the weekend.
The trip follows two days of tributes in
Havana where hundreds of thousands were encouraged by the government to
view a picture memorial to Castro at the Revolution Square.
The commemorations in the capital ended
with a massive rally Tuesday night at the square attended by Latin
American, African and Caribbean leaders, along with the Greek prime
minister — the only European leader at the event.
Raul Castro, 85, thanked the “countless
gestures of solidarity and affection from around the world” and ending
with the revolutionary battle cry, “Until victory, always!”
– ‘I am Fidel!’ –
But the presidents of Western powers, and even friendly nations including Russia, China and Iran, sent deputies in their place.
The absences underscored the divisive
legacy of a leader who defied the United States, backed guerrilla
movements in Latin America and deployed his army to conflicts in Africa
during the Cold War.
Leftist Latin American leaders vowed to
carry the torch of Castro’s revolution as they addressed the rally on
Tuesday night and the crowd chanted “I am Fidel!”
“Today it is up to us to raise the flags
of independence of the great fatherland, today it is up to us to hold
the flag of dignity and freedom of the people,” said Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro, whose late mentor, Hugo Chavez, had a special
bond with Castro.
Allies praised Castro in almost
religious tones, with Bolivian President Evo Morales saying, “Fidel is
not dead. …Fidel is more alive than ever, more necessary than ever.”
Castro’s death, however, comes as Latin America’s left is losing ground.
Maduro is facing a deep economic crisis
and fighting opposition attempts to hold a recall referendum, while
Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff was impeached in August and a conservative took
over in Argentina last year.
Castro — who ruled from 1959 until an illness forced him to hand power to his brother Raul in 2006 — died Friday at age 90.
US President Barack Obama, who along
with Raul Castro ended decades of enmity to restore diplomatic
relations, did not attend the rally, sending an advisor and a diplomat
without the status of a “presidential delegation.”
“We continue to have some significant
concerns about the way the Cuban government currently operates,
particularly with regard to protecting the basic human rights of the
Cuban people,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.
– Reunion with Che –
Castro’s ashes were placed in a
rectangular, dark wood urn that was kept at the armed forces ministry
and only shown once on state television.
The urn will be laid to rest on Sunday
at the Santa Ifigenia cemetery, next to the mausoleum of 19th century
independence hero Jose Marti.
Before that, Castro’s ashes will travel
across the country, taking the reverse route that his band of guerrilla
fighters took after defeating dictator Fulgencio Batista.
From January 2 to January 8, 1959, the
bearded rebels traveled from Santiago to Havana, stopping in Castro’s
home region, Holguin, as well as the cities of Camaguey, Las Tunas,
Sancti Spiritus, Santa Clara and Matanzas.
One of the most symbol-filled stops of
this last trip will be in Santa Clara, where the ashes of his Argentine
comrade-in-arms, Ernesto “Che” Guevara, rest.
AFP
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