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Tuesday, 19 February 2008, 18:03 GMT

US urges reform as Castro quits

Fidel Castro talks to the Brazilian president in a video chat (15 January 2008) US President George W Bush has called on Cuba to prepare for free elections after Fidel Castro's announcement that he is retiring on health grounds.

The ailing communist leader, who is 81 and has not been seen in public since surgery in July 2006, said he would not accept a new term as president.

Mr Castro's brother Raul, the 76-year-old acting leader, is strongly tipped to replace him.

The US state department has said its embargo on Cuba remains in place.

"This should be a period of democratic transition for the people of Cuba"
US President George W Bush

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It would probably not be lifted "any time soon", one senior official said.

The European Union said it hoped to revive ties with Cuba while China described Mr Castro as an old friend and said it would maintain co-operation with Havana.

Beijing has taken over as one of Havana's key economic partners, the BBC's Nick Miles reports.

Moscow used to fulfil that role but it was noticeably silent on the end of the Fidel era, he adds.

No demonstrations calling for change were reported on the streets of Havana - in contrast to muted celebrations by anti-Castro exiles in Miami, Florida.

'Blessings of liberty'

Speaking on a tour of Africa, Mr Bush said he regarded Mr Castro's departure as "a period of transition, and it should be the beginning of the democratic transition in Cuba".

The US, he added, was ready to help the "people of Cuba realise the blessings of liberty".

FIDEL CASTRO

Castro's life in pictures

Fidel Castro photographed in New York City in 1959

In the UK, Prime Minister Gordon Brown's spokesman said Mr Castro's departure opened the way for a peaceful transition to a pluralist democracy.

China described Mr Castro as an old friend and said it would maintain co-operation with Cuba.

Mr Castro announced his resignation in a letter published on the website of the Cuban Communist Party's newspaper Granma in the middle of the night, Cuban time.

He said he was "not in a physical condition" to continue as president and commander-in-chief but promised to remain "a soldier of ideas", writing essays entitled Reflections of Comrade Fidel.

The National Assembly is widely expected to elect Raul Castro as Fidel's successor. He has mooted major economic reforms and "structural changes".

But some analysts see a possible generational jump, with Vice-President Carlos Lage Davila, 56, a leading contender.

Raul Castro has worked to ensure a smooth political transition, keeping the army loyal to the regime and strengthening the Communist Party's hold by introducing reforms and weeding out corrupt officials.

He has also had the advantage of continued economic support from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in the form of millions of barrels of cheap oil.



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Fidel Castro's letter on Granma
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