Twitter Fidel castro death rumor - Fidel Castro Death Rumor: Cuban Leader's Half Brother Calls Twitter Reports Of Fidel's Demise 'A Lie'
The latest Twitter-fueled rumors about Fidel Castro's death may be exaggerated, but doctors have ordered the 85-year-old Comandante to get some bed rest, according to Castro's half brother.
"It's a lie, a big lie!," Martin Castro told The Huffington Post, referring to the latest speculation about his brother's demise. "He's resting now. But he's more or less fine."
"More or less" is the operative phrase when discussing the delicate health of the octogenarian who has held a firm grip on the largest island in the Caribbean since his 1959 revolution.
Rumors of his death, which started many years ago, became more frequent after Castro underwent extensive intestinal surgery in July 2006 and his brother Raul became acting head of state.
The latest rumor, which spread via Twitter in recent days, coincided with two important anniversaries for Castro. His revolutionary movement overthrew dictator Fulgencio Batista on Jan. 1, 1959, and on Jan 2, 1961, the Roman Catholic Church excommunicated Castro for embracing communism.
News of Castro's death even reached Biran, the town in eastern Holguin province where the Castro brothers were born, according to Castro's 82-year-old half brother, Martin, who immediately dialed another Castro for information. Martin Castro said he never heard of Twitter.
Martin Castro is the son of Fidel Castro's late father, Angel, and a young farmhand who worked for him named Generosa Mendoza. He is a family member, but holds no position in the Communist Party hierarchy. He has no special knowledge of his older brother's condition other than news his eldest brother, Ramon Castro, and other officials bring when they visit, he said.
"We called the home of Ramon Castro and his wife said doctors ordered Fidel to get some rest," Martin Castro said in a brief phone interview with The Huffington Post on Wednesday. "They told him he had to take it easy, that he must follow orders. They don't want him doing anything or coming out."
Fidel Castro had been publishing his "Reflections of Fidel" column on international affairs every couple of days last fall when the columns abruptly stopped on Nov. 14.
The Cuban state's official website Cubadebate addressed the latest killing off of El Comandante on Wednesday with a story headlined, "New lie against #FidelCastro fails on Twitter." The article accused the social networking site of helping fuel the death rumor and blasted anti-Castro exiles it called "necrophiliac counterrevolutionaries" for spreading the news.
Cubadebate said Twitter allowed an account holder with the sign-on "Naroh" to start the Castro rumor on Monday from an Italian server before deactivating the account, according to the Associated Press:
"It said Twitter then helped spread the disinformation by allowing the hashtag "fidelcastro" to become a trending topic. It briefly became the fourth most popular in the world as it drew many more people to the subject.
The site also accused Twitter of censoring subjects in the past that were in favor of the Cuban government.
There was no immediate reaction from Twitter. Rumors that a celebrity or other public figure is dead are common on social media sites and can spread quickly because of their nature."
The Cuban website said another false story about Castro's death last August included a computer virus in a spam email titled "Fidel is Dead." The email came with a doctored photo of the former Cuban leader lying in a coffin.
Cuba's government has declined to make official comments on Castro's health. On Dec. 31, Castro sent a get-well letter to a Cuban baseball star that was read over state television, the Associated Press reported.
Cubadebate proudly noted Fidel Castro's place in the Guinness Book of World Records for having survived 638 assassination attempts. The website said the record book should include a citation for "enemies of the Cuban revolution as the most frustrated assassins in history."
In its annual forecast, a state-sanctioned body of top Afro-Cuban Santeria priests earlier this week warned of the loss of many people to old age, a delicate subject on an island ruled by an 80-year-old president and several octogenarian aides. But the priests insisted their message was not a reference to Cuba's aging leaders or former President Fidel Castro.
Source: huffingtonpost
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