Monday, April 18, 2011

Cuba's geriatric leadership admits it lacks a reserve of well-trained replacement

Monday, April 18th 2011 - 06:38 UTC

Cuba's geriatric leadership admits it lacks a reserve of well-trained
replacement

Cuba will consider placing term limits on its leaders to assure new
blood in the government, President Raul Castro said in a speech kicking
off a Communist Party congress on the island he and his brother have led
for more than five decades.

He said the government does not have "a reserve of well-trained
replacements with sufficient experience and maturity" to replace the
current leaders, most of whom are in their 70s and 80s.

"We have reached the conclusion that it is advisable to recommend
limiting the time of service in high political and state positions to a
maximum of two five-year terms," he told 1,000 delegates at the
congress, where economic reform is the main agenda item.

Castro, 79, said he would not be excluded from the limits, which will be
discussed not at this congress, but a party conference next January.

Cuba's geriatric leadership has been a topic of concern for a government
intent on assuring the survival of Cuban socialism and new faces could
be elected to high party positions during the congress.

Long-tenured officials have been a trademark of Cuba since the 1959
revolution that put Fidel Castro in power.

Fidel Castro, who is 84 and did not attend the congress, ruled for 49
years and younger brother Raul Castro was defence minister for the same
amount of time before taking over the presidency in 2008.

In the line of succession, first vice president Juan Machado Ventura is
80 and second vice president Ramiro Valdes is 77.

"It's really embarrassing that we have not solved this problem in more
than half a century," Castro said. "Although we kept trying to promote
young people to senior positions, life proved that we did not always
make the best choice," he said.

Raul Castro was expected to be elected the party's First Secretary, a
post he has filled unofficially since Fidel Castro fell ill in 2006.
Fidel Castro only recently disclosed that he had left the post.

Castro told the congress, the party's first in 14 years, it would
consider 311 proposed reforms during the four-day meeting, all aimed at
remaking Cuba's creaking, Soviet-style economy.

The changes will reduce the size of the state and expand the private
sector, while maintaining central planning.

Before the congress convened, Cuba staged a military parade to mark the
50th anniversaries of the US-backed Bay of Pigs invasion and the
declaration of Cuban socialism.

On April 16, 1961, fearing US invasion was imminent Fidel Castro told
Cubans the 1959 revolution he led from Sierra Maestra mountains was
Marxist Leninist inspired.

"What the imperialists can't forgive us ... is that we have made a
socialist revolution right under the nose of the United States," he
proclaimed in speech paying tribute to victims of pre-invasion bombing
raids the previous day.

On April 17, a force of CIA-trained Cuban exiles, backed by US ships and
planes, came ashore at the Bay of Pigs 160 km southeast of Havana in a
bloody attempt to spark a counter-revolution.

Castro rallied tens of thousands of troops and citizens to the battle
and two days later declared victory as the attackers fled or were killed
or captured in the botched invasion.

The triumph by tiny Cuba versus the superpower 145 km away won Castro
favour at home and abroad and is portrayed by Cuban leaders as one of
their greatest accomplishments.

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