Tuesday,
May 1, 2007; 7:34 PM
No Sign of Castro on May Day in Cuba
By ANITA SNOW
The Associated Press
HAVANA -- There was no sign of a convalescing Fidel Castro as
hundreds of thousands of Cubans marched through Havana's Revolution
Plaza to celebrate May Day, casting new doubts on his recovery
and whether he will return to power.
Tuesday
marked only the third time in nearly five decades that Castro
has missed the sweeping International Workers' Day festivities
_ a major celebration here and around the world.
While
recent images of Castro meeting with Chinese leaders indicated
he had improved considerably since undergoing emergency surgery
nine months ago, his absence at the parade through the Revolution
Plaza raised questions about whether he is strong enough to run
the country.
The
80-year-old leader has missed two other major events since announcing
his illness on July 31 and temporarily ceding power to his 75-year-old
brother Raul Castro, the defense minister. Raul presided at the
Nonaligned Summit in September and a major military parade in
December.
"It
now seems more unlikely than before that he will fully resume
the presidency," said Wayne Smith, the former
head of the American mission in Havana. "And the more time
that passes, the more unlikely it seems."
Smith
said that with Castro failing to show Tuesday, Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez's assertions this week that Castro was back "in
charge" appeared to be "a lot of hot air."
Others
said he could still resume some responsibility.
"To
me, the key question is to what degree is he coming back?"
said Phil Peters, Cuba specialist for the Lexington Institute,
a Washington-area think tank. "Would his comeback be partial,
ceremonial? Will he spend two hours in the office checking off
on strategic decisions?"
Raul
Castro, wearing his typical olive-green uniform and cap, stood
stiffly and smiled under the shadow of a towering statue of Cuban
independence leader Jose Marti. He occasionally waved as marchers
clad in red T-shirts and dark slacks streamed past, clutching
plastic Cuban flags, portraits of his more famous brother and
banners denouncing U.S. "imperialism."
Although
Cuban life is little changed under Raul's leadership, loyalists
missed the energy Fidel brought to events such as May Day.
"Everyone
wanted to see him, but it's good that he recovers completely.
Now the revolution is continuing with Raul," said 68-year-old
hotel worker Victor Reyes, who was among the marchers.
Special
guests included a Cuba solidarity group from New York. The foreigners
were impressed by the large turnout, which Havana's Radio Reloj
estimated at 500,000. Smaller marches were held simultaneously
in cities around the island.
"Even
without (Fidel Castro), they came out en masse," said Joppe
Van Meervelde, 29, a metal workers' unionist from Belgium.
Marchers
protested the recent decision to free on bond anti-communist militant
Luis Posada Carriles, pending his trial on U.S. immigration charges.
Havana accuses the Cuba-born Posada of orchestrating a 1976 airliner
bombing that killed 73 people _ a charge he denies.
Signs
and banners demanded "Prison for the Executioner" and
accused the U.S. government of a double standard on terrorism
in the Posada case.
Marchers
also demanded the release of five Cuban spies imprisoned in the
U.S. for being unregistered foreign agents, calling them heroes
who were merely protecting their country from violent exile groups.
On
the eve of the march, Fidel Castro mentioned Posada and the five
agents in the latest of several editorials he has issued in recent
weeks, but focused mostly on his opposition to U.S. plans to use
food crops to produce ethanol for American cars.
Elsewhere
on May Day, riot police charged into crowds of protesters in Turkey,
spraying tear gas and kicking and clubbing fleeing demonstrators.
Hundreds were arrested.
In
the German city of Dortmund, more than 300 leftist rioters set
fire to train tracks and vandalized streetcars and buses after
a May Day demonstration against right-wing extremism got out of
control. More than 130 protesters were detained.
Clashes
also broke out between police and demonstrators in Berlin, with
several reported injuries. Police said they detained rioters,
but could not say how many.
Hundreds
of thousands of Russians took to the streets as an array of political
forces held marches and rallies to mark the holiday. The largest
gathering _ estimated by police at 20,000 _ was led by the pro-government
United Russia party and a government-approved trade union organization.
But thousands also turned out for a Communist Party demonstration.
In
the Chinese territory of Macau, police fired shots into the air
and used pepper spray to disperse about 1,000 protesters who had
veered off a march route and tried to break through police lines.
The demonstrators were demanding a crackdown on illegal workers
and corruption.
In
the U.S., Latin American immigrants marched against U.S. immigration
policies, while other rallies were held across South America and
Asia.
___
Associated
Press writers Christopher Torchia in Istanbul, Turkey, Sylvia
Hui in Macau, Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin and Steve Gutterman
in Moscow contributed to this report.
©
2007 The Associated Press