HAVANA - Cuban President Fidel Castro furiously denied on Monday a story in
Forbes magazine that he was worth $900 million and said he would step down if
the magazine could prove the assertion.
Cuban President Fidel Castro displays a copy
of Forbes magazine, which had ranked him as the seventh wealthiest ruler
in the world, during a live television broadcast in Havana, May 15, 2006.
[Reuters] |
The financial magazine ranked Castro as the seventh wealthiest ruler in the
world in its annual tally of the "Fortunes of Kings, Queens and Dictators."
Castro went on television brandishing a copy of the US-based magazine to tell
Cubans the story was a "repugnant slander" by a capitalist publication.
With Communist Cuba's Central Bank governor at his side, Castro challenged
Forbes to prove the allegation.
"If they can prove that I have a bank account abroad, with $900 million, with
$1 million, $500,000, $100,000 or $1 in it, I will resign," he said at the end
of a four-hour broadcast.
"It is so ridiculous to say I have a fortune of $900 million, a fortune with
no heirs. What would I need all that money for, if I will soon be 80 years old?
Castro, in power since a leftist revolution in 1959, says his net worth is
nil and that he earns only 900 Cuban pesos ($40) a month.
Kings and sheiks of the oil-rich Gulf Arab states still top the Forbes list,
published in its May 22 edition.
Castro ranked higher than Queen Elizabeth of Great Britain, whose fortune
according to the Forbes amounts to some $500 million in estates, gems and a
stamp collection built by her grandfather, but not Buckingham Palace or the
crown jewels. The British monarch came to the throne in 1952, seven years before
Castro seized power.
Castro last year threatened to sue Forbes after the magazine included him on
its 2005 list with an estimated fortune of $550 million.
The Forbes estimate includes state enterprises that the magazine assumes he
controls in Cuba, among them the Havana Convention Center, the Cimex retail
conglomerate and a pharmaceutical company that exports vaccines.
Forbes said it assumed a portion of the profits of state companies goes to
Castro and cited rumors of money stashed in Swiss bank accounts, but gave no
details, saying former Cuban officials insist Castro has skimmed profits for
years.