By DPA
Havana : Cuba’s interim leader Raul Castro has suggested that economic changes – though within a socialist system – could be on the way, while his brother and long-time leader Fidel has again hinted that he may soon leave office for good.
In a final session Friday of Cuba’s National Assembly before re-elections in January, Raul Castro said that “excessive” government intervention and prohibitions had led to some difficulties that would have to be overcome.
Fidel Castro, in a letter read out to the assembly, said he was no longer a “person who clings to power”, as he may have been in his younger days. Last week he said he had no plans to block younger Cuban leaders from taking over.
“My fundamental duty is not to cling on to office, and much less to block the path of younger people,” he said in a letter read out on Cuban television last week.
Castro fell ill and temporarily handed over power to his 76-year-old brother Raul in the summer of 2006. He has not been seen in public since, but has released videos and a number of statements and newspaper articles commenting on policy.
Raul Castro, in a speech before the assembly, for the first time suggested that some means of production could be opened up to those that could operate them most efficiently, and highlighted the high prices of basic foods as an issue that needed urgent attention.
He said that “excessive prohibitions” had at times led to “illegalities”, but he insisted socialism remained the only system “capable of overcoming the difficulties”.