UPDATE 2 - Fidel Castro dead at 90

UPDATE 2 - Fidel Castro dead at 90

Turkey describes former Cuban revolutionary as someone who 'left deep traces in political history'

UPDATES WITH QUOTES FROM OBAMA, TRUMP AND KERRY

NEW YORK (AA) – Fidel Castro, the former leader of Cuba, died at the age of 90 late Friday, his brother, Cuban President Raul Castro announced.

A divisive and iconic figure, Castro is known to some as a champion of socialism whose revolutionary regime protected Cuba’s sovereignty in the face of American imperialism, while critics brand him a dictator with a decades-long administration plagued with human rights abuses.

Nevertheless, Castro was a time-tested, formidable leader who survived a military invasion, a full-blown international missile crisis, a withering U.S. economic embargo, and numerous assassination attempts.

In April, he delivered a rare speech during the nation’s Communist Party congress, praising his brother for his “magnificent effort” and promising victory for the Cuban people.

Castro was born Aug. 13, 1926, in the southeastern Oriente Province of Cuba.

He was imprisoned for two years for leading an abortive rebellion against the regime of dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1953.

He then launched a guerilla war against the government, eventually overthrowing Batista in 1959 and being sworn in as prime minister.

Two years later, he survived a CIA-sponsored invasion by a paramilitary group made up of 1,400 exiles who attempted to enter the country from the south coast at the Bays of Pigs.

Beginning in 1958 during the Batista regime and expanded on a few roll-outs, a comprehensive embargo was imposed by the U.S. on Cuba, crippling its economy.

To this day, the embargo continues but the diplomatic ties, cut off for decades, were reestablished in 2014, along with some easing of limitations on travel and economic policies.

In 1962, the world came to the closest it ever did to a nuclear war during the Cold War period after Cuba allowed the Soviet Union to deploy missiles on its soil in retaliation for a similar deployment by the U.S. in Italy and Turkey. A fortnight of fear later, the two superpowers of the time agreed to withdraw deployments and establish a nuclear hotline.

In 1976, Castro was elected President of Cuba by the parliament, in what would be a decades-long tenure.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1989, Cuba declared the dawn of the “Special Period in Time of Peace”, a euphemism for a severe economic crisis that saw one third of the country’s GDP wiped out and its petroleum imports reduced to one tenth of pre-1990 numbers.

In 1991, Cuba hosted the Pan-American Games, becoming the first Latin American country to beat the U.S. in total gold medals in what turned into an international display of the public support Castro enjoyed.

In 1992, he reached a deal with the U.S. over Cuban refugees, under which Washington would accept 3,500 Cubans. What transpired instead was more like an exodus, with tens of thousands boarding the Florida-bound boats that came from the U.S.

In 2006, Castro underwent surgery on his intestines, and delegated his presidential responsibilities to his brother Raul, who was sworn in as president in 2008.

- Turkey’s reaction

In a statement on Saturday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry conveyed its condolences on the death of the iconic Cuban leader.

"Fidel Castro, who left deep traces in political history and made radical reforms in education, healthcare, art and science, has passed on values that will lead young generations in Cuba," it read.

Highlighting Castro's long-term struggle in Cuba, the statement said his life made an overwhelming impact all over the world and earned prestige even in different political camps.

The statement recalled Castro's saying of: "'A better world is possible.'"

"It reflects a common longing of billions of people from Latin America to Asia, the Middle East to Africa, no matter what political opinion they have," the statement added.

On 11 Feb. 2015, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a delegation visited Cuba in an attempt to boost business and cultural ties.

It was the second visit of a high-level Turkish delegation to Latin America countries, with the first being held in 1995.

Erdogan's visit had focused on regional and international developments, bilateral relations and signing cooperation agreements in different fields.

- US reaction

President Barack Obama offered condolences to Castro's family in a written statement and said the U.S. was extending "a hand of friendship to the Cuban people" at this time.

The Cubans both in the U.S. and Cuba are filled with "powerful emotions" as they recall "the countless ways" in which Castro changed the course of individual lives, families and the Cuban nation, Obama said.

"History will record and judge the enormous impact of this singular figure on the people and world around him," he said and added that the Cubans would remember the past, but also look to the future in the days ahead.

Obama also highlighted that the U.S.-Cuba relations were discorded for nearly six decades, but that both countries engaged to pursue a future based not on differences but on common things they share as friends and neighbors.

In sharp contrast to Obama’s statement, the U.S. President-elect Donald Trump described Castro as a "brutal dictator" who oppressed his own people.

Trump, who initially reacted to the news by tweeting "Fidel Castro is dead!", said in a statement the Cuban leader’s legacy was "one of firing squads, theft, unimaginable suffering, poverty and the denial of fundamental human rights."

He added Castro's death would change the relations between two countries.

"While Cuba remains a totalitarian island, it is my hope that today marks a move away from the horrors endured for too long, and toward a future in which the wonderful Cuban people finally live in the freedom they so richly deserve," he said.

"Though the tragedies deaths and pain caused by Fidel Castro cannot be erased, our administration will do all it can to ensure the Cuban people can finally begin their journey toward prosperity and liberty."

Secretary of State John Kerry also extended condolences to the Cuban people and said that Castro "played an outsized role" in the Cuban people's lives, and "influenced the direction of regional, even global affairs."

Saying that the U.S. reaffirmed its support to deepen engagement with the Cuban people now and in the current years, Kerry added both countries will deepen friendship for a "better future" for Cubans and Americans while normalizing ties.

- Other tributes

Leaders and activists elsewhere also paid tribute to the former Cuban guerilla.

South African leader Jacob Zuma issued a statement on Saturday which described Castro as a revolutionary leader who dedicated his entire life not only for the freedom of the Cuban people but also for the freedom of other oppressed people around the world.

Muhammed Desai of the South African Chapter of the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement said Castro was decisive in his opposition against the Israeli occupation of Palestine.

“In 1973, he terminated all diplomatic relations with Israel. Indeed South Africans, Palestinians and the oppressed masses of the world have lost a true friend today,’’ Desai told Anadolu Agency on Saturday.

*Anadolu Agency correspondents Hassan Isilow in Johannesburg, Sibel Ugurlu in Ankara, and Esra Kaymak Avci in Washington contributed to this story.

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