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NEWS



Posted on Fri, Nov. 03, 2006

CUBA

Castro video shows illness is serious

There's no question Fidel Castro is very sick, but the U.S. intelligence community is unsure if he is suffering from cancer.
BY PABLO BACHELET AND FRANCES ROBLES
frobles@MiamiHerald.com

Fidel Castro's movements are slow and awkward, his speech slow and shaky. His oversized track suit and bathrobe hide any sign of his intestinal surgery, like a colostomy bag. And his own words hint that death remains a possibility.

''I have been saying it for a while -- that the recovery would be prolonged and not exempt of risk. In reality, well, I'm coming along just as it had been foreseen,'' Castro said in a video released Saturday before adding, ``But I'm not worried. I have no fear of what may happen.''

But three months after the 80-year-old Cuban leader temporarily ceded presidential powers to his brother Raúl following ''complicated'' surgery, the exact details of his illness remain Cuba's most closely guarded secret -- and the subject of widespread rumors and speculation.

The latest Castro video aired on Cuban TV served as a ''proof of life'' of sorts. Rumors that he had died last week were churning so briskly that even Castro felt he had to respond. Prior to Saturday's video, more than a month had passed since any photos of the Cuban leader had been made public, adding fuel to the rumor fires.

Contacto, a bilingual magazine out of California, reported on its website two weeks ago that sources ''close to the circle of power'' in Cuba had said he was in a coma. Time magazine last month cited anonymous U.S. sources saying some in the Bush administration are convinced Castro has terminal cancer.

''Now let's see what they say. Now they'll have to resuscitate me, huh?'' Castro said in the video. ``They're making fools of themselves.''

Since announcing on July 31 that intestinal bleeding had required surgery, the government of Cuba has offered only a handful of photos and videos of Castro, and nothing other than verbal reassurances that he's recovering.

Yet the images released over the past three months show Castro in an apparent slow decline. He has acknowledged losing 41 pounds, but then said he regained about half of that.

His bulky track suit and bathrobe -- he has yet to appear in regular clothes -- always cover up his midsection, leaving open the possibility that he's been fitted with a colostomy bag. But he still sports a full head of hair and a beard, suggesting he has not undergone chemotherapy.

EXTENDED RECOVERY

The latest video showed him doing what appeared to be walk-in-place exercises, slowly swinging his elbows as his slippered feet, set wide, marked time but did not move forward.

That ''is exactly what you would have expected for somebody who has been ill for an extended period of time, who has not been active,'' said University of Miami gastroenterologist Dr. Jeffrey Raskin. ``You have a wide-based gait to steady yourself because you're weak. . . . Probably in his own environment, he's walking around with a walker.''

Raskin and Dr. Charles Gerson, a gastroenterologist at Mount Sinai in New York, both said that Castro's three-months-and-counting recovery suggest a serious illness, such as cancer.

''Usually for a benign condition if you have surgery, after a month or six weeks you are back to normal,'' Gerson said. ``Three months after surgery, he should be better.''

The U.S. intelligence community believes Castro is ''gravely ill'' but lacks any hard evidence that he has terminal cancer, several officials said on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

A former U.S. government official, who requested anonymity to avoid jeopardizing his contacts with the Bush administration, said Washington has obtained what he called ''pretty reliable'' accounts that indicate Castro is not recovering as well as Cuba claims.

''The latest I've heard was still pretty grave for Castro,'' the former official said, adding that he has not been told the nature of Castro's ailment. ``Castro may not make it through the New Year.''

U.S. intelligence still believes that Castro is suffering from Parkinson's disease, a degenerative neurological disorder, as first reported by The Miami Herald last year.

One well-connected South American official consulted by The Miami Herald said his country's intelligence service indeed believes that Castro has a slow-progressing cancer. It was unclear how the agency has come to believe this, and the official's report could not be independently confirmed.

`RESTING A BIT'

Cuban officials continue to insist at every turn that Castro is recovering, and preparations are reported to be continuing to celebrate his birthday. He turned 80 on Aug. 13 but celebrations, including a military parade and massive rally, were put off until Dec. 2 because of the surgery.

''He is well. He's been resting a bit because of the operation he had,'' Castro's other brother, Ramón Castro, 82, told the Associated Press this week. ``It's been published that he's going to start working again. We're trying to hold him back a bit longer, though.''

But even if he officially resumes his jobs as president and head of the Cuban Communist Party, U.S. officials say they remain convinced that he will not be able to physically command Cuba as he had for nearly five decades.

McClatchy Washington Bureau Chief John Walcott, Miami Herald staff writer Jacob Goldstein and Miami Herald translator Renato Pérez contributed to this report.





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