Retired Cuban President Fidel Castro congratulated Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro for a "brilliant and brave speech" he gave the night he suffered a severe setback in legislative elections.
"I
join the unanimous opinion of those who have congratulated you on your
brilliant and courageous speech on the night of Dec. 6, barely knowing
the verdict of the polls," Castro said in an inspirational note to Cuba's key ally.
Castro, 89, had formed a socialist alliance with Maduro's predecessor, Hugo Chavez.
Following Castro's retirement in 2008 and Chavez's death in 2013, that
alliance has been continued by Fidel's younger brother and current
President Raul Castro, and by Maduro, Chavez's former vice president who won his own presidential election after Chavez died.
Maduro's
election continues a long string of victories for the style of
governing known as "Chavismo," but Venezuela's opposition trounced the
ruling Socialists in the Dec. 6 election to win the legislature for the
first time in 16 years.
Raul Castro issued a
45-word statement of support beginning "Esteemed Maduro" the morning
after the vote. Fidel Castro sent a 537-word "Dear Nicolas," finding
glory in Venezuela's history of independence, first from colonial Spain
under Simon Bolivar and more recently from the United States under
Chavez.
"The millions of children and young
people who today attend the best and most modern public schools are
those of Venezuela," Castro wrote, praising what he considered the
accomplishments of the Socialist Party.
"The
same is true of its network of healthcare centers belonging to a people
who are brave but impoverished by centuries of looting by Spanish
colonialism and later by the big transnationals that extracted from her
womb, for over a hundred years, the best of the immense wealth of
petroleum with which nature endowed the country."
Cuba
has some 30,000 doctors and nurses working in Venezuela, an OPEC
country that, in exchange, provides Cuba with more than 100,000 barrels
of oil per day.
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