Cuban former castaway Elian calls Castro friend
MIAMI (Reuters) – Cuban shipwreck survivor Elian Gonzalez
considers President Fidel Castro a friend and father but would
like to see his Miami relatives again, he told an interviewer
for a U.S. television network.
Gonzalez, now 11, told CBS journalist Bob Simon that Castro
attended his elementary school graduation and declared he was
proud to have Gonzalez as his friend.
“I also believe I am his friend,” Gonzalez told Simon in an
interview to be broadcast on Sunday on the network’s “60
Minutes” show. “Not only (do I think of Castro) as a friend,
but also as a father.”
Gonzalez turned 6 shortly after he was found floating on an
inner tube off the Florida coast in November 1999. He had
survived a shipwreck that killed his mother and other Cubans
who had left the communist-ruled island for the United States.
Cuban exiles in Miami lost a passionate legal battle to let
him stay with his great-uncle’s family in Miami, who refused to
give him up. Immigration agents finally seized Gonzalez from
their home at gunpoint and reunited him with his father, who
took him back to Cuba.
Gonzalez, who is considered a hero in Cuba, was interviewed
in Spanish with his father at a museum in his hometown of
Cardenas, CBS said. The network provided an English translation
of his comments and said no Cuban officials or monitors were
present at the interview.
Gonzalez said in the interview that his Miami relatives
tried to persuade him to stay but that he missed his father and
friends back in Cuba.
“They were telling me bad things about (my father),” he
said. “They were also telling me to tell (my father) that I did
not want to go back to Cuba and I always told them that I
wanted to.”
He said the worst parts of his Miami stay were the nights.
“I would have nightmares and my uncles would talk to me
about my mother … it was better not to remind me of that
because that tormented me,” he said. “I was very little.”
Nonetheless, he said he would like to see his Miami
relatives again.
“Despite everything they did, the way they did it, … they
are my family,” he said.
Cuban exiles in Miami, including one of Gonzalez’s uncles
interviewed for the show, said the boy was happy in Miami and
is being brainwashed in Cuba.
