Wednesday, June 18, 2008

New Images of Fidel Castro Released By Cuban Regime

Babalu has audio posted of the Chavez-Castro meeting today.
And, here's the VIDEO.

The first photos in six months of Fidel Castro were released by the regime today.

Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro listens during a meeting with his brother Cuban President Raul Castro (R) and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez
(L) in Havana June 17, 2008. (REUTERS/Estudios Revolucion)


Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro (L) gestures during meeting with his brother Cuban President Raul Castro and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez (R) in Havana June 18, 2008 in this image taken from a video footage. (Cubavision via Reuters TV)


UPDATE: This looks like the same sweatsuit Castro was wearing in June 2007 during one of his last appearances.

5 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:35 PM

    Are you sure that isn't old footage of Castro? I'm just saying.....

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  2. This whole Castro thing is starting to remind me of "Weekend at Bernie's".

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  3. Jim,

    The audio portion is a farce, which unfortunately is in Spanish and not very translatable, but it is hilarious.

    Val

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  4. Anonymous7:43 AM

    Are things so dicey in Cu-bahr that they can not even have a funeral for the man? How long did they have to keep Brezhnev on ice before they announced he was being hazed by Stalin and Lenin in Red Square?

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  5. Anonymous5:59 PM

    ABOUT THE GLASS ROOF
    Written by:Reinaldo Escobar in Desde Aquí

    The ex-president Fidel Castro has just published a prologue of the book "Fidel, Bolivia and Something More" in which he denigrates the blog Generación Y, which my wife writes on the internet. From the first day she has put her full name (which he omits) with her photo in view of the readers in order to sign the texts that she writes for the sole purpose, confessed repeated times, of vomiting everything in our reality that nauseates her.

    The ex-president disapproves of the fact that Yoani has accepted this year's Ortega and Gasset prize for digital journalism. arguing that this is something fostered by imperialism in order to drive the waters of it's mill. I recognize the right of this man to make this comment, but I permit myself to make the observation that the responsibility implied in receiving a prize will never be comparable to that of awarding it, and Yoani, at least, has never placed a medal on the chest of any corrupt official, traitor, dictator or murderer.

    I make this clarification because I remember perfectly well that it was the author of these reproaches who put (or ordered put) the Order of José Martí on the most terrible and undeserving of all possible lapels: Leonid Ilich Brezhnev, Nicolae Ceausescu, Todor Yivkov, Gustav Husak, Janos Kadar, Mengistu Haile Mariam, Robert Mugabe, Heng Samrin, Erich Honecker and others that I have forgotten. I would like to read, in the light of these times, a reflection that justifies those inappropriate honors that, to drive the water of other mills, sullied the name of our apostle.

    It's true that the name of the philosopher Ortega y Gasset can be equated with elitist and even reactionary ideas, but at least, in difference from those decorated by the author of the prologue, he never launched tanks against his nonconformist neighbors, or built palaces, or imprisoned anybody that thought differently than him, or left his followers in the stockade, or amassed fortunes with the misery of his people, or constructed camps of extermination, or gave the order to shoot those who, in order to escape, jumped over the wall of their patio.

    ReplyDelete