World News
Castro picks ‘young’ heir

CONTINUITY ... Cuba’s President Raul Castro and newly elected first vice president Miguel Diaz Canel, (R), attend the closing session of the National As- sembly of the Peoples Power in Havana February 24, 2013. Castro announced on Sunday he would step down from power after his second term as president ends in 2018, and the new parliament named a 52-year-old rising star to become his first vice president and most visible successor. Castro, 81, made the announcement in a nationally broadcast speech shortly after the Cuban National Assembly elected him to a second five-year term in the opening session of the new parliament. “This will be my last term,” Castro said.
HAVANA – Cuban President Raul Castro won re-election on Sunday to what he pledged will be his last term, and finally unveiled a 52-year-old political heir to bring the regime into the future.
“This will be my last term,” Castro, aged 81, told lawmakers after the National Assembly re-elected him and named a new regime number two, Council of State Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel.
Castro said he was “elected to defend, maintain and continue perfecting socialism - not to destroy it,” adding that his economic reforms will create “a less egalitarian society, but a fairer one.”
Choosing Diaz-Canel, a former military man and professor from Villa Clara who has represented the president on foreign trips in recent months, “marks a final step in configuring the country’s future leadership, through the slow and orderly transfer of the main leadership positions to new generations,” Castro said.
This is not the transition that Cuba’s nemesis, the United States, has fruitlessly spent decades and millions of dollars seeking.
Sole one-party regime in the Americas
Washington has long prodded neighbour Cuba to open up to a multiparty system and market economics, much of the time during the more than 40-year rule of revolution icon Fidel Castro.
Raul Castro became Cuba’s interim president when Fidel took ill in 2006. He formally became president in 2008.
Through the Cold War and now for more than two decades after it, the United States has kept trying to isolate Cuba to press for democratic change.
It has had a full trade embargo on Havana, the only one-party Communist regime in the Americas, since 1962 to pressure the communist island to open up democratically and economically.
Cuba finally appears poised to have new leadership lined up - if only it can continue to prop up its dysfunctional economy while keeping the regime afloat.
Support from Venezuela
In addition to depending on Venezuelan aid, Cuba has so far failed to discover oil in its waters that experts say lies beneath the seabed off its Gulf of Mexico coast.
So the fate and future of the Cuban regime also depends on the health of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, Cuba’s main economic supporter and political ally, who is recovering from cancer surgery.
But there is no guarantee a successor would feed Cuba’s economy as much as Chavez.
Diaz-Canel, who turns 53 in April, is an electrical engineer by training, a former education minister and the president’s de facto political heir seeking to project the Americas’ only one-party Communist regime into the future.
Since March, Diaz-Canel has been one of the eight vice presidents on the Council of Ministers.
He took the number two spot from Jose Ramon Machado Ventura, aged 82, who relinquished the post but remains one of Cuba’s vice presidents.
Miguel Diaz-Canel
Diaz-Canel, as political heir, cuts a starkly different profile from the revolutionary leadership, whose members are mostly in their 80’s.
If he comes to lead Cuba, he would be the first leader of the regime whose entire life has been under the Castro regime that started in January 1959.
Barring any changes, Diaz-Canel would succeed Raul Castro, who will be 82 in June, if the president serves out his term through 2018.
A careful speaker, the lanky Diaz-Canel also has been a leader of the Communist Youth Union, and went on an international “mission” to Nicaragua during the first leftist Sandinista government.
He rose up the ranks, leading the party in Villa Clara in central Cuba, before being chosen to lead it in Holguin province in the east. Diaz-Canel was then bumped up to the Politburo in 2003.
Castro jokes about resigning
There was more new blood among the five vice presidents on the Council of State, in the person of Mercedes Lopez Acea, aged 48, the former leader of the Communist Party’s Havana provincial assembly.
And Raul Castro’s own daughter, Mariela Castro, was elected as an assembly lawmaker for the first time.
A clinical sexologist, she has lobbied the regime to guarantee better treatment for gays, lesbian and transgender Cubans.
She is expected to push for Cuba to legalize same-sex marriage.
The National Assembly, whose members ran for office in October unopposed, also chose Esteban Lazo, aged 68, as their new speaker. Seen as an ideological hardliner, he is also the regime’s most prominent Afro-Cuban leader.
“The choice of Lazo to lead the National Assembly confirms that the approach to any ideological change is a really cautious one. Lazo has been all about ideological orthodoxy,” said Professor Arturo Lopez-Levy at the University of Denver in the US state of Colorado.
On Friday, Raul Castro surprised some by joking publicly about resigning.
“I am going to resign. I am about to turn 82.
I have the right to retire. Don’t you believe me?” he said.
-Nampa-Sapa
