MUNICIPIO INDEPENDENCIA, Venezuela - President Hugo Chavez said Thursday his
close friend and ally Fidel Castro is in a "great battle for life," but he also
expressed optimism about the 79-year-old Cuban leader's recovery.
"From here, let's pray to God for Fidel and his recovery, and he's fighting a
great battle," Chavez said in a televised speech from the eastern state of
Anzoategui.
His statement was the most serious yet from a close Castro ally in describing
the 79-year-old Cuban leader's condition. But Chavez also predicted, with a
laugh, that Castro would defy the U.S. government's plans for a transition in
Cuba and emerge from a hospital where he is being treated to reassume the
presidency.
Chavez said he had received a message from Castro on Wednesday "that filled
me with more optimism, with more faith."
"Among other things Fidel told me ... 'I keep saying Chavez, God help Chavez
and his friends,'" Chavez said.
"I wrote to him in my own handwriting last night, in the early morning, to
send it with the messenger who was returning immediately: 'You are fighting a
great battle every day, all these nights,'" Chavez said.
Castro said July 31 he was stepping aside temporarily, granting his powers to
his brother Raul as head of the government and the Communist Party so he could
recover from intestinal surgery.
Neither brother has been seen in public since then. Details of Castro's
condition, his ailment and the surgical procedure he underwent are being treated
as a "state secret."
Chavez said that in his letter to Castro, "I told him, 'Here we're with you
every second, every minute, every hour, every day, every night of that great
battle for life that you are fighting from your heart, from your soul.'"
"It's a battle, and I know, Fidel, that we're going to win it, too. We are
prevailing and we will prevail," Chavez said.
Chavez spoke near the end of his speech as if Castro were listening.
"Get better, Fidel. It's an order. I never give you an order. Now I'm giving
you one," Chavez said. "Get better, an order. I know you're disciplined."
The Venezuelan president described Castro's health troubles as an "ambush,"
coming so soon after Castro gave a three-hour speech in Cordoba, Argentina, and
visited the childhood home of fellow revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara.
Chavez said he and Castro hugged at the door of the plane, promised to see
each other again soon, "and then suddenly the surprise, but that's life."
"It's life, biology," Chavez said. "And it's also 80 years that you've lived,
Fidel Castro, and what an 80 years Fidel has lived."
The Venezuelan leader has said he will dedicate his weekly TV and radio
program, "Hello President," this Sunday to Castro in honor of his 80th
birthday.