
Havana – Talking at length, grinning for cameras and cracking jokes, Fidel Castro looked stronger and more vibrant today as the first TV images of the ailing Cuban leader in four months appeared to confirm official reports he is feeling better.
The two-and-a-half-minute clip appears to show Castro in the same red track suit with black and white trim that he wore in past official images. At times, the 80-year-old shakes his fist and waggles a finger for effect while talking to Vietnamese Communist Party chief Nong Duc Manh, who met with him Saturday.
The pair are later shown smiling and embracing warmly. An upbeat Castro draws laughs when he compliments a translator on how well he speaks Vietnamese and Spanish.
Toward the end of the meeting, Manh says: “I don’t want to go, but I want you to rest to get better.” Manh also invites the convalescing leader to visit Vietnam’s capital of Hanoi.
Castro visited the Asian country in 1973, when the U.S. was backing South Vietnam in a war with the communist north, which eventually won.
The clip ends with a round of applause from those accompanying Castro and Manh. A few seconds later, Castro is shown enthusiastically clapping with the others as the image fades out.
Photos of Castro standing with Manh also appeared today on the front page of the Communist Youth newspaper Juventud Rebelde.
Some Cubans lined up at newsstands to buy a copy.
“He’s always animated, but now he’s healthier,” Havana resident Marvis Lescay said. “It is very satisfying for me to see him getting better.”
It was the first official videotape of Castro released since he met in Havana with his friend and ally Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in January and the first still photos of him since he met with Chinese Communist Party leader Wu Guanzheng in April.
Castro has not been seen in public since he announced July 31 that he had undergone emergency intestinal surgery and was temporarily ceding power to his brother Raul, the defense minister.
Raul Castro turned 76 today, but it was unclear how he spent his birthday. The government did not say whether he planned to appear in public.
The elder Castro’s exact ailment and condition remain state secrets, but he is widely believed to suffer from diverticular disease, which forms sacs in the colon that can become inflamed and bleed.
Senior Cuban officials have repeatedly said Castro is on the mend, even “practically fully recovered,” and the government has occasionally released photographs and videotapes showing off his progress.
Raul Castro and Manh signed several accords Friday, including one that makes Vietnam Cuba’s latest partner in oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico.



