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Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Obama invokes 'future of hope' for Cuban people



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Media captionPresident Obama says his visit to Cuba has left him feeling hopeful for the future
US President Barack Obama has invoked "a future of hope" for Cuba in an unprecedented live TV address delivered from the Grand Theatre in Havana.

Mr Obama said he had come to Cuba "to bury the last remnants of the Cold War" after decades of conflict.
He told Cuban President Raul Castro that he did not need to fear a threat from the US nor from "the voice of the Cuban people".
Mr Obama is the first sitting president to visit Cuba in 88 years.
Latest updates of Obama's visit
In pictures: Obama in Cuba

'Bury the past'

In his keynote speech on the last day of his three-day visit to Communist-run Cuba, Mr Obama said it was time for the United States and Cuba to leave the past behind and make a "journey as friends and as neighbours and as family, together" towards a brighter future. Cuban President Raul Castro gestures upon arriving at the Gran Teatro de la Habana in Havana to attend US President Barack Obama's speech on 22 March, 2016.
 
Image caption Raul Castro (left) was in the audience listening to Mr Obama's speech
He urged Cubans to "leave the ideological battles of the past behind" and to define themselves not through their opposition to the US but just as Cubans.

At the scene, Tara McKelvey

The speech in the theatre was vintage Obama - it had a narrative, starting with the earlier, dark years of US-Cuban relations that date back to the 1950s.
It also had personal elements - he said he was born in the year of the Bay of Pigs, and that afterwards the world nearly came to an end.
Finally it had evocative language - "I know the history, but refuse to be trapped by it" - and a few jokes. And it built up to his larger point, which was his message for the Cuban people - choose democracy. It isn't perfect but it's the best system there is.
He was a powerful speaker in the theatre, and he gave a speech that was eloquent and moving.

"For all the politics, people are people and Cubans are Cubans," he said.
He said the time had come for US policy towards Cuba to change because it had not worked and was outmoded, a remnant of the Cold War.
He also called for the lifting of the 54-year old US trade embargo against Cuba, a remark which was met by loud applause.
The embargo remains one of the main sticking points in US-Cuban relations but can only be lifted by the US Congress.

'Open debate'

He insisted that the United States would respect the two nations' differences and would not attempt to impose changes on the communist-run island. US President Barack Obama delivers a speech at the Gran Teatro de la Habana in Havana on March 22, 2016.
 
Image caption Mr Obama spoke against the background of two enormous Cuban and US flags
But he also said he believed that citizens should be free to speak their mind without fear and to choose their government in free elections.
He said it was no secret that the Cuban and US governments disagreed on many issues.
Mr Obama acknowledged that there were "flaws in the American system: economic inequality, the death penalty and racial discrimination".
He said those were just a few samples and that Raul Castro had "a much longer list" of US shortcomings and had reminded President Obama of many of them.
"But open debate is what allows us to get better," he said. "Democracy is the way to solve these problems," he added.
After the speech, Mr Obama left to meet Cuban dissidents, the most controversial part of his itinerary in the eyes of the Cuban government.
President Castro was visibly angered on Monday when a US reporter asked him about political prisoners held in Cuba.
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Media captionRaul Castro on political prisoners: "Give me a list and I will release them immediately"
Not accustomed to probing questions from the media, President Castro challenged the reporter to give him a list of political prisoners and denied Cuba was holding any.
Among the dissidents Mr Obama is meeting on Tuesday are expected to be members of the Ladies in White, a group which campaigns for the release of political prisoners.
Just hours before Mr Obama landed in Havana on Sunday, dozens of their members were arrested as they held their weekly protest in front of a church.

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