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Castro says Cuban system to stay | Castro says Cuban system to stay |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Cuban President Raul Castro says he is willing to enter into dialogue with the US but the island's communist system remains non-negotiable. | Cuban President Raul Castro says he is willing to enter into dialogue with the US but the island's communist system remains non-negotiable. |
Mr Castro said he wanted to respond to recent overtures by Washington. | Mr Castro said he wanted to respond to recent overtures by Washington. |
But in a speech that was given a standing ovation in parliament, he also emphasised that he had not been elected to return Cuba to capitalism. | But in a speech that was given a standing ovation in parliament, he also emphasised that he had not been elected to return Cuba to capitalism. |
US President Barack Obama has said he wants to "recast" relations with Cuba but the US has also called for reforms. | |
In his speech, Mr Castro acknowledged that there had been less aggression and anti-Cuban rhetoric under the Obama administration. | |
I was elected to defend, maintain and continue perfecting socialism - not to destroy it Cuban President Raul Castro | |
He repeated Cuba's willingness "to sustain a respectful dialogue with the United States, between equals". | |
But he also noted that a decades-old US embargo remained in place and said he wished to respond to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's comments linking dialogue with reform. | |
"With all due respect, in response to Mrs Clinton, but also to the European Union... I was not chosen as president to restore capitalism to Cuba or to renounce the revolution," Mr Castro said. | |
"I was elected to defend, maintain and continue perfecting socialism. Not to destroy it." | |
Mr Castro, 78, stepped up to the Cuban leadership three years ago when his older brother, Fidel, underwent gastric surgery. | |
He formally assumed the presidency last year. | |
In his speech, he scoffed at those who say Cuba's political system will crumble after the "the death of Fidel and all of us". | |
"If that's how they think, they are doomed to failure," he said. | |
On the economic front, the Cuban president announced that the government had cut its budget for a second time this year amid a growing financial crisis. | |
The government has recently pushed through a series of austerity measures and cut its projected economic growth estimate for this year to 1.7% |
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