Cubans mourn Fidel Castro, ponder life without him
People in Cuba have begun nine days of mourning declared over the death of the country’s revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro.
On Sunday, Cubans took to the streets of the capital, Havana, holding flags and portraits of the late revolutionary leader to mark the first day of the national mourning announced by the government.
Students held candlelight vigils to pay tribute to Castro, who ruled the Latin American country for five decades until 2006, when he ceded power to his brother, Raul.
Castro died on Sunday at the age of 90. His body is to be cremated in accordance with his will and his ashes will go on a four-day procession through the country before being buried in the southeastern city of Santiago on December 4.
Leading a Communist Cuba, Castro broke off diplomatic ties with the Capitalist United States in 1961 and expropriated US companies’ assets totaling more than one billion dollars.
The iconic leader’s demise and the election of Donald Trump to the US presidency has, meanwhile, generated concern among some Cubans.
Trump, who will take office in January 2017, is known for his incendiary and often misinformed rhetoric on world matters. Following Castro’s death, the US president-elect described the Cuban figure as a “brutal dictator.”
“With ‘El Comandante’ gone, I am a little fearful of what could happen because of Trump’s way of thinking and acting,” said a Havana resident, using a popular reference for Castro.
“He could set back and block everything that’s been going on, all the things Obama has done, and he did a lot, managing to get the US closer to Cuba,” she added.
Another resident said, “Trump’s policies are very aggressive. We’ll have to see what he actually does. But it certainly looks like bad news for Latin America and for Cuba in particular.”
The US president-elect, earlier in his election campaign, had pledged that, if elected, he would close down the newly-reopened US Embassy in Havana.
SS