Monday, March 14, 2011

Castro is the "political earthquake" Libyan perhaps more serious than the Japanese

Havana .- The president of Cuba, Fidel Castro, believes that "political earthquake" that takes place around Libya is "potentially more serious" than the devastating earthquake in Japan, a tragedy that "can not be blamed man ", writes in an article published today. In the last of his "Reflections" entitled "The two earthquakes," the Cuban leader is confident that the international community "will do everything in their power to help" the "laborious" Japanese people, he recalls, "was the first to suffer a nuclear attack unnecessary and inhumane.

" Fidel Castro review that occurred in Japan is the third major earthquake that occurs in less than two years after the attacks in Haiti and Chile in 2010 and believes that "no man can be blamed for such tragedies." In his view "another earthquake, political, potentially more serious is taking place in Libya and affects around one way or another to all countries." "The drama raging in the country is booming and its outcome is still uncertain," wrote Fidel Castro, who insists on his belief that the intention of the United States and NATO is "to intervene militarily in Libya and abort the revolutionary wave shaking the Arab world.

" "The people who oppose the NATO intervention and defend the idea of \u200b\u200ba political solution without foreign intervention, hold the belief that the Libyan patriots defend their homeland to the last breath," the Cuban leader of 84 years.

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