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Castro call cheers Cuba officials | Castro call cheers Cuba officials |
(30 minutes later) | |
Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro has been in phone contact with Communist Party officials, state-run media say. | |
This is the first official news about him for 11 days. The party paper Granma gave no details about his health. | |
The veteran leader handed over control to his brother Raul in July, when he underwent urgent intestinal surgery. | The veteran leader handed over control to his brother Raul in July, when he underwent urgent intestinal surgery. |
On Friday Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez - an ally of Fidel Castro - dismissed growing speculation that the Cuban leader had cancer. | On Friday Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez - an ally of Fidel Castro - dismissed growing speculation that the Cuban leader had cancer. |
Mr Chavez said he had spoken with his friend on the phone and denied the illness was terminal. | Mr Chavez said he had spoken with his friend on the phone and denied the illness was terminal. |
The Granma article said Mr Castro - who is 80 - had been in contact with provincial leaders, who reacted with jubilant applause when they received the call. | |
The Cuban leader has not been seen in public for four months, and few details have emerged on his condition. | The Cuban leader has not been seen in public for four months, and few details have emerged on his condition. |
State secret | State secret |
The BBC's Stephen Gibbs in Havana says an increasing number of Cubans believe that whatever Fidel Castro's health might be, he seems unlikely to return to power. | The BBC's Stephen Gibbs in Havana says an increasing number of Cubans believe that whatever Fidel Castro's health might be, he seems unlikely to return to power. |
Earlier, US director of National Intelligence John Negroponte said Mr Castro was close to death. | Earlier, US director of National Intelligence John Negroponte said Mr Castro was close to death. |
"Everything we see indicates that it will not be much longer... months, not years," he told the Washington Post. | "Everything we see indicates that it will not be much longer... months, not years," he told the Washington Post. |
Mr Castro's last appearance on Cuban TV, looking frail and wearing a tracksuit rather than his trademark military fatigues, was in late October. | Mr Castro's last appearance on Cuban TV, looking frail and wearing a tracksuit rather than his trademark military fatigues, was in late October. |
Cubans were told that details of the ailment would be kept secret to prevent Cuba's enemies from taking advantage of them. | Cubans were told that details of the ailment would be kept secret to prevent Cuba's enemies from taking advantage of them. |
The US broke official ties with Cuba following Mr Castro's rise to power in 1959 and has had an economic embargo in place against the island since 1960. | The US broke official ties with Cuba following Mr Castro's rise to power in 1959 and has had an economic embargo in place against the island since 1960. |