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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Castro looks healthier in TV interview       Send a link to a friend

[June 06, 2007]  HAVANA (AP) -- A healthier looking Fidel Castro appeared on Cuban television Tuesday, speaking slowly and focusing on past memories rather than his recovery and future in his first lengthy appearance since he fell ill and gave up power last summer.

The 80-year-old Castro's now grayer beard and hair were well-trimmed and he looked rested and alert -- no longer the picture of a man on the verge of death. But he did not speak of international issues and did not mention any plans to return to governing Cuba.

"I tell my compatriots, I'm now doing what I should be doing," Castro said, during an interview with Randy Alonso, host of the government's nightly "Round Table" program. "There are no secrets."

But his condition and exact ailment have remained state secrets since July 31, when Castro announced he had undergone emergency intestinal surgery and was stepping aside in favor of a provisional government headed by his 76-year-old brother Raul, the defense minister.

Castro has been recovering in an undisclosed location and has not been seen in public since that announcement. Life on the island has been little changed and top officials have insisted for months that Castro's health is improving.

The interview was taped Monday and lasted about 50 minutes. It was impossible to tell whether the footage has been edited.

Sometimes grinning in awe and sometimes listening intently, Alonso got Castro talking by asking open-ended questions in a soft tone to start. At one point, Alonso said the ailing leader was in good spirits and Castro agreed.

Castro was wearing a red, white and blue tracksuit affixed with a Cuban flag. He often shook his arm and extended a finger for emphasis as he spoke about his past visits to Vietnam and recalled a weekend meeting with the chief of that country's Communist Party, Nong Duc Manh.

"How hot it was," said Castro, recalling his 1973 visit to Vietnam when the U.S. was still backing the south in a war there that the communist north eventually won. "It was like you jumped in a pool with clothes on," he said of the humidity, which can also be brutal in Havana.

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After a few minutes, Castro began reading a tedious string of statistics about the number of teachers and other basic services in Vietnam from a notebook in his lap,

Castro sounded coherent but meandered from one topic to another, much as he typically had done in speeches before he fell ill. More than anything he said, the interview was notable for how much stronger and healthier Castro looked.

It took him about 40 minutes to mention President Bush, and then only in the context of international meetings about the environment.

In an essay signed by Castro last week, he quoted the U.S. president as saying, "I'm a hard-line president and I'm only waiting for Castro to die." But he made no mention of that in the latest interview.

"I'm not the first, nor will I be the last, that Bush has ordered to be deprived of life," Castro wrote in the essay. But he provided few details about when the U.S. president allegedly made the comments.

In recent weeks, Castro has written a string of essays including the one about Bush's alleged comments. Others have blasted a U.S.-backed plan to use food crops for biofuels. He promised  during Tuesday's interview that he would write more in the future.

Just days ago, Castro grumbled in his writings about having to cut his hair and trim his beard for official photos and suggested he was happy with the role of columnist and elder statesmen and in no hurry to retake Cuba's presidency.

Wearing another of the tracksuits that have replaced olive-green military uniforms as his trademark garb since he fell ill, Castro looked stronger, more upbeat and chattier in video clips of his meeting Saturday with Manh.

It was the first official videotape of Castro released since a January meeting in Havana with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, and the first still photographs of him since a meeting with Chinese Communist Party leader Wu Guanzheng in April.

[Text copied from Associated Press file]

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