Cuba's Raul Castro marks decade in power
2016-07-29 11:37
By Carlos BATISTA
Havana (AFP) -- Cuban President Raul Castro succeeded his brother Fidel
10 years ago Sunday, a decade marked by once-unthinkable reforms on the
communist island and a historic rapprochement with the United States.
Castro emerged from the towering shadow of his big brother on July 31,
2006, when health problems forced Fidel to give up the power he'd held
since his ragtag band of guerrillas overthrew dictator Fulgencio Batista
in the Cuban Revolution in 1959.
Castro, who fought alongside Fidel, had served as his defense minister
ever since, leaving him perfectly positioned to succeed his brother, who
turns 90 on August 13.
With steel-rimmed glasses hiding his sharp gaze, the 85-year-old Raul is
as discreet as his larger-than-life brother is voluble.
But he soon began making his mark, bringing Cuba into a new era.
After consolidating control, backed by the military, Castro began small
steps toward opening up the Soviet-style command economy.
He created space for private enterprise, allowing small-scale
entrepreneurs, or "cuentapropistas," to open for business.
Today, half a million Cubans are self-employed or work for small,
family-run outfits -- though officially private firms remain illegal, as
they have been since 1968.
In 2011, he began allowing Cubans to buy and sell homes and vehicles,
ending decades of labyrinthine apartment and car swaps aimed at skirting
the old ban on property sales.
To modernize the economy, he passed a new investment law to court
foreign cash and launched a huge new port in Mariel, just outside
Havana, complete with an industrial park offering tax breaks for foreign
firms.
In parallel, he launched a series of diplomatic initiatives to forge new
allies.
He opened talks with the European Union on normalizing their strained
relations, and last December signed a deal with the Paris Club of
creditor countries to settle Cuba's 25-year-old debt.
He also renegotiated debts to China, Russia and Mexico.
End of Cold War
Most importantly, he seized the chance for detente with Cuba's old enemy
the United States presented by President Barack Obama's arrival in power
in 2008.
This shift had practical, as much as any ideological, motivations:
leftist firebrand Hugo Chavez's Venezuela -- Cuba's main benefactor
since the collapse of the Soviet Union -- was sliding off the economic
rails.
But the changes on the ground are real.
Despite lingering tension -- notably over the US embargo, which remains
in place -- the bitter Cold War enemies have reopened embassies in each
other's capitals.
Cruise ships now sail from Miami to Havana. Travelers can stay at the
American-operated Four Points by Sheraton. And regular commercial
flights between the two countries are due to begin in the coming months.
Sealing the reconciliation they first announced in December 2014, Obama
visited Castro in Havana last March, the first time a US president had
been to Cuba since 1928.
In other major reforms, Castro has also ended restrictions on Cubans
traveling overseas, allowed internet access for all and introduced
decade-long term limits for top officials.
The latter even apply to himself.
Castro -- who served on an interim basis for his first two years in
office, officially assuming the presidency in 2008 -- has announced he
will step down in 2018.
Source: 29 July 2016 - Cuba's Raul Castro marks decade in power - News -
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