Raul Castro keeps top job but leadership changes to come

Cuban former President Fidel Castro (L) speaking next to Cuban President Raul Castro.
Cuban former President Fidel Castro (L) speaking next to Cuban President Raul Castro.
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AFP, Havana :
President Raul Castro will serve a second term as head of Cuba’s Communist Party alongside other veterans, as the island’s aging leaders see out a final period in power amid economic reform and detente with the United States.
The Communist Party, whose leadership elections were announced by state media on Tuesday, wants avoid any chaotic collapse as it wrestles with economic change and a transition from the generation of leaders who fought in the 1959 revolution.
Speaking at the closure of a four-day party congress, Castro, 84, said it would be the last one headed by the current leaders, signalling that they would step aside sometime before the next such meeting in five years.
“This seventh congress will be the last one led by the historic generation,” Castro said.
Castro had proposed age limits and term limits for top leaders as the party gathered for the start of the congress over the weekend, raising expectations septuagenarian and octogenarian veterans would begin to step aside.
But he also made clear that such changes would not be rushed.
“(We will) introduce the necessary changes, without hurry and with no improvisation, which would only lead to failure,” he said on Tuesday.
At the end of the congress, the first since 2011, the Communist Party said Castro had been re-elected as first secretary, with Jose Ramon Machado Ventura, 85, re-elected as second secretary.
Fidel Castro appeared alongside brother Raul at a Communist party congress that ended on Tuesday without sweeping leadership changes, leaving to another day the question of who will run Cuba when the old guard bows out.
Flanked by his younger sibling, the 89-year-old retired revolutionary was given a rock star welcome at the close of a congress that left Cuba’s elderly Politburo at the helm for another five years-despite Raul Castro’s pledge to stand down in 2018.
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