Fidel Castro RIP

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This is the statement by President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins on the death of Fidel Castro. Some of you may know him as the friendly little guy who comes out on the pitch at Lansdowne Road to welcome the teams.


Statement by President Michael D. Higgins on the death of Fidel Castro

"I have learned with great sadness of the death of Fidel Castro, founder of modern Cuba, and its Prime Minister from 1959 to 1976, as well as its President from 1976 to 2008.

Following the revolution in 1959, Fidel Castro brought significant political and social change to his country, overcoming not just the regime of General Fulgencio Batista but also the economic isolation forced upon Cuba in the years that followed.

Having survived some 600 attempts on his life, Fidel Castro, known to his peers in Cuba as ‘El Comandante’, became one of the longest serving Heads of State in the world, guiding the country through a remarkable process of social and political change, advocating a development path that was unique and determinedly independent.

Cuba achieved 100% literacy many years ago and built up a health system that is one the most admired in the world. With economic growth rates similar to many other Latin American countries, inequality and poverty are much less pronounced in Cuba than in surrounding nations.

His Governments faced not only issues of Development but also the consequences of an embargo imposed by Cuba’s largest neighbour, the United States, which was a regular topic for discussion at the United Nations and which was criticised by a large number of countries in the international community.
The economic and social reforms introduced were at the price of a restriction of civil society, which brought its critics.
Fidel Castro was of a generation of leaders that sought offer an alternative global economic and social order. He was President of the Non Aligned Movement and a leading figure in international gatherings that sought a more equal world of trade, rejected odious debt and sought an independent path to development.
He advanced such ideas, for example, at such events as the Tri Continental Conference in 1966. And he would continue with this theme which informed his speech, for example, at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio in 1992. He was speaking of how it was possible to eliminate global hunger and of the enormous burden that international debt was placing on impoverished nations. Expected to give a lengthy speech, his very short statement ended with the phrase: ‘Let us pay the debt to humanity, not the debt to the banks.’
The restoration of diplomatic relations with the United States in 2014 and the visit of Pope Francis, and the response to it, have been ushering in a new period in Cuba’s history, one which seeks to retain the achievements of a social kind with greater freedoms in the civil society.
Fidel Castro will be remembered as a giant among global leaders whose view was not only one of freedom for his people but for all of the oppressed and excluded peoples on the planet.”




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Statement by President Michael D. Higgins on the death of Fidel Castro

"I have learned with great sadness of the death of Fidel Castro, founder of modern Cuba, and its Prime Minister from 1959 to 1976, as well as its President from 1976 to 2008.

Following the revolution in 1959, Fidel Castro brought significant political and social change to his country, overcoming not just the regime of General Fulgencio Batista but also the economic isolation forced upon Cuba in the years that followed.

Having survived some 600 attempts on his life, Fidel Castro, known to his peers in Cuba as ‘El Comandante’, became one of the longest serving Heads of State in the world, guiding the country through a remarkable process of social and political change, advocating a development path that was unique and determinedly independent.

Cuba achieved 100% literacy many years ago and built up a health system that is one the most admired in the world. With economic growth rates similar to many other Latin American countries, inequality and poverty are much less pronounced in Cuba than in surrounding nations.

His Governments faced not only issues of Development but also the consequences of an embargo imposed by Cuba’s largest neighbour, the United States, which was a regular topic for discussion at the United Nations and which was criticised by a large number of countries in the international community.
The economic and social reforms introduced were at the price of a restriction of civil society, which brought its critics.
Fidel Castro was of a generation of leaders that sought offer an alternative global economic and social order. He was President of the Non Aligned Movement and a leading figure in international gatherings that sought a more equal world of trade, rejected odious debt and sought an independent path to development.
He advanced such ideas, for example, at such events as the Tri Continental Conference in 1966. And he would continue with this theme which informed his speech, for example, at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio in 1992. He was speaking of how it was possible to eliminate global hunger and of the enormous burden that international debt was placing on impoverished nations. Expected to give a lengthy speech, his very short statement ended with the phrase: ‘Let us pay the debt to humanity, not the debt to the banks.’
The restoration of diplomatic relations with the United States in 2014 and the visit of Pope Francis, and the response to it, have been ushering in a new period in Cuba’s history, one which seeks to retain the achievements of a social kind with greater freedoms in the civil society.
Fidel Castro will be remembered as a giant among global leaders whose view was not only one of freedom for his people but for all of the oppressed and excluded peoples on the planet.”

 
I am somewhat amazed that sunybay has not posted his sincere condolences in this thread yet.

For my part, I suspect that the Cuba of today is a better place than that of the Batista government.

RIP
 
At last!!

great to see this assesin an evil man is not anymore in this world.

Made his country a ruin and showed the world what comunism is all about.

disgrace what most of the leader of the world have said these days about him ( Donald an exception).
 
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For my part, I suspect that the Cuba of today is a better place than that of the Batista government.

RIP

i guess You have not been living in Cuba since 1959......
by the way they are driving in La Habana the same cars of Batistas age....
 
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I had to laugh at the comment regarding the narrowness of the gap between the rich and the poor. It's because there are hardly any rich people there.

I would, though, like to learn more about their top class health provision.

As for the cars, they'd be enough to make me want to go and visit the place. I love those old cars.
 
I had to laugh at the comment regarding the narrowness of the gap between the rich and the poor. It's because there are hardly any rich people there.

I would, though, like to learn more about their top class health provision.

As for the cars, they'd be enough to make me want to go and visit the place. I love those old cars.


There was one person very rich who died last friday.


about the médical affair
when Castro was very ill in 2006, they used spanish doctors, so.......


about the cars, i prefer the ones we use in europe.


the isle has been a concentration camp, 20% in the exile and many woman prostituting over the years to survive.
 
I thought the concentration camp was run by the Yanks.


What is still happening in Cuba is something very serious, it is a pity You treat it like a joke.

it would be great all these stupid people defending the Che and Fidel to be living ten years in Cuba with their families.
 
I doubt that any right thinking person would consider Guantanamo a joke.

Might be worth reminding those who weren't around at the time that Batista Cuba was run by the Mafia and Batista only fell when the US stopped support in 1958. Castro took advantage of a vacuum but, at the time, he was infinitely preferable to what went before. I suggest that all those 'stupid' people who weren't around read it up. Cuba is no Eden but absolutely the best way to change things is to engage as Obama has done. Hard to see the same from Trump and it may indeed be the first of many flashpoints.
 
Castros fortune is bordering 1000 millons dollar in country with a PIB per capita of 5k dollars

Batista was a disaster but what this monstruos has done to Cuba has no name.

My wife had a cuban friend who died in México in a car accident and his mother was not allowed to go to his burial

our gardener is cuban and left Cuba being part of the Olímpic box team and You will have to listen what happened and what is still happening to his family..... And no end stories of families i know Which had propeties there in the 50s and were stolen by this thief


Soviet unión put 5 times more money there than marshall plan and years later Venezuela has paíd the régimen and check how people live there

Castro is the organizar of FARCS and all comunism narcotrafic bands in latino América and is a disgrace for humanity.



Trump will not allow what the peace Nobel winner signed with Castro the second
 
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Had a good laugh when I read good ole Gerry Adams was on his way to the Funeral. I've lost touch with local news ,is he the official representative of Ireland?
 
i guess You have not been living in Cuba since 1959......
by the way they are driving in La Habana the same cars of Batistas age....

The current state of Cuba is possibly a little to do with the 50-odd year Trade Embargo deployed by the United States, and the last 30-years without Soviet financial help to off-set it.
 
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The embargo .....is the excuse even a 4yo boy dont believe


great to see these days in La Habana
the great politicians of the world( maduro, Ortega, Evo, correa, Tsipras ,Jacob zuma, mugabe, Castro the second, Nobel peace winner Santos....)
i missed north Korean great man , Putin , Obama, and Francisco the pope

from Spain, a pity the ETA Boss out of jail recently was not able to go as not allowed to fly american soil, he would have enjoyed the party with all his friends. But without Arafat this is not the same.
 
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Suny, you need to come of the fence and tell us what you REALLY think about authoritarian leaders, left wing dictators and liberation theologists in 3rd world countries. For once and for all: are you for or against?

(ps..do you still have the tee shirt I gifted you?)
 
Suny, you need to come of the fence and tell us what you REALLY think about authoritarian leaders, left wing dictators and liberation theologists in 3rd world countries. For once and for all: are you for or against?

(ps..do you still have the tee shirt I gifted you?)


you know where I am !


about the t shirt
I change it with one of John Lennon,


as you know Che, Lennon and Castro are my 3 favorites of the 20th century
 
you know where I am !


about the t shirt
I change it with one of John Lennon,


as you know Che, Lennon and Castro are my 3 favorites of the 20th century

You misspelled Lenin, but as English is not your first language we forgive you.
 
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I think Suny is referring to Everton's Aaron Lennon AC. Although he's wrong because unlike the other two, when Lennon tries to dictate there's no end product.
 
And you think you're so clever and classless and free
But you're still fu*cking peasants as far as I can see
A working class hero is something to be


John Lenin
 
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