World
Swarajya Staff
Mar 29, 2016, 06:00 PM | Updated 06:00 PM IST
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Fidel Castro, the great revolutionary and former president of Cuba, has
criticised US President Barack Obama’s recent visit to his country.
In
a long and often offensive toned letter titled “Brother Obama” the
elder Castro struck a discordant note with the country’s political
class, including his younger brother Raúl Castro, the current president.
Obama
did not meet Fidel Castro during his three-day visit to Cuba last week.
The historcal visit was meant to bury hostilities between the two
countries, and to encourage the reform of Cuba’s flagging economy.
Castro
senior’s letter is typical of Communist leaders - do something and talk
something else. With a population of a little over 11 million people,
Cuba imports 70 to 80 percent of its domestic food requirements. Its annual
bill is $ 2 billion. But Castro, still languishing in history,
decried Obama’s call to set aside the countries’ decades of animosity
and look to a common future as neighbours.
In his nearly 1,600-word
missive, Castro recounted the history of United States aggression
against his country, including the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961 and the
decades-long economic embargo of the island, which is still in effect.
The letter urged Obama not to jump to conclusions about the Cuban system, or assume that the past could be so easily forgotten.
“My
modest suggestion is that he reflects and doesn’t try to develop
theories about Cuban politics,” Castro wrote, citing Obama’s own words
during the trip, including a request to leave the past behind and embark
on a future of hope and togetherness. “I suppose all of us were at risk
of a heart attack upon hearing these words from the president of the
United States.”
“Nobody should be under the illusion that the people
of this dignified and selfless country will renounce the glory, the
rights or the spiritual wealth they have gained with the development of
education, science and culture,” Castro wrote.
“We don’t need the empire to gift us anything,” Castro’s letter says.
Obama
last week became the first US head of state to visit Cuba in 88 years
as part of a broader detente between the former Cold War enemies, a move
US officials hope will help spark social and economic reform in the
communist country.
Since 2008, Raúl Castro has flirted with liberalization—allowing Cubans to open businesses, own property and go on the Internet—moves that would have been unimaginable under the elder Castro, whose political career centred around his personal enmity with the US.