Miguel Díaz-Canel named Cuba's Communist Party chief

Politics

TBS Report
19 April, 2021, 09:35 pm
Last modified: 19 April, 2021, 09:51 pm
At 60, Díaz-Canel is almost 30 years younger than his predecessor

Cuba's Communist Party has announced Miguel Díaz-Canel will succeed Raúl Castro as the party's first secretary.

Díaz-Canel, who in 2018 succeeded Castro as Cuba's president, had been widely tipped for the arguably more influential post of party leader, reports the BBC.

The transition means that the island will be governed by someone other than Fidel or Raúl Castro for the first time since the Cuban revolution in 1959.

Díaz-Canel is seen as loyal to the Castros and their economic model.

Speaking on Friday, when Díaz-Canel had not been officially named yet as first secretary, Raúl Castro said that he would hand over the leadership to a younger generation "full of passion and anti-imperialist spirit".

At 60, Díaz-Canel is almost 30 years younger than his predecessor.

It follows the announcement on Friday - on the first day of the party's four-day congress - that Raúl Castro was stepping down from the key position of first secretary.

The 89-year-old had been in the post since 2011, when he took over from his older brother, Fidel Castro.

Between them, the two brothers have ruled Cuba since the 1959 revolution which overthrew the authoritarian ruler General Fulgencio Batista.

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