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Cuban elections could shed light on Fidel Castro's future
WILL WEISSERT 

The Canadian Press

January 19, 2008 at 10:45 PM EST

HAVANA - Fidel Castro hasn't been seen in public for nearly 18 months and says 
he is too sick to campaign. But that hasn't stopped the 81-year-old from 
standing for re-election in parliamentary polls Sunday.

Some 8.4 million voters are being asked to back Mr. Castro and 613 other top 
Communists, career politicians, musicians and athletes for posts in the 
country's rubber-stamp legislature, known as the National Assembly.

Mr. Castro, Cuba's unchallenged "Maximum Leader" since 1959, ceded power to his 
younger brother Raul in July 2006, following emergency intestinal surgeries and 
is still recovering from an undisclosed illness at a secret location.

Although he no longer runs the government, Mr. Castro still heads Cuba's 
supreme governing body, the Council of State, and his re-election to parliament 
is necessary to retain that position.

Following the vote, legislators have 45 days to choose among their colleagues 
for a new Council of State, meaning a decision on whether Castro will remain 
president or permanently retire could come by March.

Voters at district polling places overseen by school children are given a list 
of candidates - just one per post. They are strongly encouraged to check a 
single box supporting the full slate, although if they object to some 
candidates, they can mark individual boxes by names they support and leave 
others blank.

Candidates who don't get more than 50 per cent of the vote lose, although 
National Assembly officials don't remember that happening since Cubans began 
voting for their parliament in 1993.

Cuba now elects a new parliament every five years, and while organized 
campaigning is forbidden, candidates are encouraged to interact with district 
voters and their resumes are posted at the polls. The Communist party is the 
only party allowed.

Preliminary returns should be ready quickly Sunday, as electoral officials use 
ham radios or even carrier pigeons to report results from isolated mountains 
and corners of the countryside after polls close.

Mr. Castro, who has been penning essays on a wide array of topics for 
publication in state newspapers, in December wrote that he has no intention of 
clinging to power or standing in the way of a new generation of leaders. But he 
also praised the example of a celebrated Brazilian architect who is still 
working at 100.

"I am not physically able to speak directly to the citizens of the municipality 
where I was nominated for our elections," he wrote Wednesday.

"I do what I can: I write," he added, seeming frustrated. "Writing is not the 
same as speaking."

The government says more than 95 per cent of voters will participate in 
Sunday's vote, even though the U.S. government dismisses the process as a sham.

"These elections are not a break with past practice in Cuba and do not 
represent a real opportunity for the Cuban people to decide for themselves how 
they will be governed and who will govern them," Kurtis Cooper, a State 
Department spokesman, said in Washington on Friday.

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