Fidel Castro expected to resign as Cuba party chief
Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro speaks during a meeting with Cuban and foreign intellectuals visiting Havana's international book fair February 15, 2011.
(Reuters) - The Cuban Communist Party has moved forward the election of new leadership to a congress in April where longtime party leader Fidel Castro is expected to step down, sources close to the party said over the weekend.
Castro, 84, previously handed over most of the responsibilities as first secretary but kept the title. His official departure from his last leadership position would be a symbolically important step toward a new era for the island he ruled for 49 years.
President Raul Castro, as second secretary of the Communist Party, is in line to succeed his older brother as its top leader, just as he did when Fidel Castro resigned the presidency in February 2008.
But because there are currently no other Castro family members in leading positions, the second secretary spot likely will be filled by someone without Castro as a last name for the first time since the party was created in 1965.
As first and second secretaries, the Castro brothers lead the party's guiding Central Committee, for which elections originally were expected to be held at a party conference at the end of this year. But the vote has been moved to April because party statutes say it must be done at a formal congress, sources said.
The Central Committee chooses the party's powerful Political Bureau and its executive Secretariat, where numerous changes are also expected, sources said.
Governments, Cuba watchers and the local population hope changes in the top party ranks will shed light on who might replace the Castro brothers and other aging leaders who first came to power in the 1959 revolution in which Fidel Castro took over the Caribbean island.
At stake is the future leadership of the country as it undergoes important economic reforms that President Castro, 79, says are necessary to keep the communist system alive.
MODERNIZE THE ECONOMY
He has said that the primary task of the April congress, the first since 1997, is to officially adopt reforms that modernize Cuba's Soviet-style economy. The Communist Party is the only legal political party in Cuba and the country's constitution says it is "the highest directing force of the society and state."
Despite widespread expectation that he will resign, Fidel Castro, who has been in the background since he was stricken with an intestinal disorder in July 2006, still has supporters who think he should stay as party leader.
Both he and Raul Castro are among those who have been nominated in the local party elections.
"There are many people in the party who want Fidel to continue on, but I think in the end some sort of new position will be created for him," one party insider said, asking his name not be used.
The 2006 illness required emergency surgery and led to complications that Castro has said nearly killed him.
When he resigned as president, Fidel Castro said he was no longer in condition to run the daily affairs of the country.
But he regularly writes columns for local media and the Internet and is consulted on important matters of state. He is still a member of Cuba's parliament, but has not attended its twice-yearly meetings since falling ill.
After four years out of public view, he reappeared last summer and since then has held sporadic public encounters with groups of local professionals and visitors, videos of which are sometimes broadcast by state television.
Castro, 84, previously handed over most of the responsibilities as first secretary but kept the title. His official departure from his last leadership position would be a symbolically important step toward a new era for the island he ruled for 49 years.
President Raul Castro, as second secretary of the Communist Party, is in line to succeed his older brother as its top leader, just as he did when Fidel Castro resigned the presidency in February 2008.
But because there are currently no other Castro family members in leading positions, the second secretary spot likely will be filled by someone without Castro as a last name for the first time since the party was created in 1965.
As first and second secretaries, the Castro brothers lead the party's guiding Central Committee, for which elections originally were expected to be held at a party conference at the end of this year. But the vote has been moved to April because party statutes say it must be done at a formal congress, sources said.
The Central Committee chooses the party's powerful Political Bureau and its executive Secretariat, where numerous changes are also expected, sources said.
Governments, Cuba watchers and the local population hope changes in the top party ranks will shed light on who might replace the Castro brothers and other aging leaders who first came to power in the 1959 revolution in which Fidel Castro took over the Caribbean island.
At stake is the future leadership of the country as it undergoes important economic reforms that President Castro, 79, says are necessary to keep the communist system alive.
MODERNIZE THE ECONOMY
He has said that the primary task of the April congress, the first since 1997, is to officially adopt reforms that modernize Cuba's Soviet-style economy. The Communist Party is the only legal political party in Cuba and the country's constitution says it is "the highest directing force of the society and state."
Despite widespread expectation that he will resign, Fidel Castro, who has been in the background since he was stricken with an intestinal disorder in July 2006, still has supporters who think he should stay as party leader.
Both he and Raul Castro are among those who have been nominated in the local party elections.
"There are many people in the party who want Fidel to continue on, but I think in the end some sort of new position will be created for him," one party insider said, asking his name not be used.
The 2006 illness required emergency surgery and led to complications that Castro has said nearly killed him.
When he resigned as president, Fidel Castro said he was no longer in condition to run the daily affairs of the country.
But he regularly writes columns for local media and the Internet and is consulted on important matters of state. He is still a member of Cuba's parliament, but has not attended its twice-yearly meetings since falling ill.
After four years out of public view, he reappeared last summer and since then has held sporadic public encounters with groups of local professionals and visitors, videos of which are sometimes broadcast by state television.
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