Cuban leader Fidel Castro is battling to save
his life, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has said.
Mr Chavez, a close friend of Cuba's left-wing leader, said he
hoped Mr Castro would recover but admitted he faced a hard struggle.
Mr Castro, 80, has not been seen in public since undergoing
surgery in July and handing over political power.
Mr Chavez spoke at the Latin American summit in Brazil in a
rare admission of the state of Mr Castro's health.
Chavez hopeful
Venezuela's president said he spoke to the Cuban leader by
telephone for half an hour several days ago.
"He is going through a difficult situation but just like
he says, the machine that they have to fix is 80 years old,"
Mr Chavez told the Mercosur trade summit.
"I cannot give details [of his health] because I am not
his doctor, and even if I was I would not give them to you.
"He's back in the Sierra Maestra and locked in a battle
for his life," Mr Chavez said.
The Sierra Maestra is a rugged mountain range in south-east
Cuba with a long history of guerrilla warfare.
After Fidel Castro returned to Cuba from exile in Mexico, he
and his fellow rebels hid out in the Sierra Maestra from where
they were able to expand their 26 July Movement, building up
their guerrilla forces and starting the revolution which in
1959 overthrew the regime led by Fulgencio Batista.
"There are those who want Fidel to die... [but] we have
confidence he will recover completely.
"I don't know when Fidel will die, I hope he lives 80
more years, I hope he lives 100 more years."
'Slow recovery'
There have been steady reports suggesting that Mr Castro's
condition is extremely serious.
In an interview with the Reuters news agency, Dr Jose Luis
Garcia Sabrido, head of surgery at Madrid's Gregorio Maranon
public hospital, described Mr Castro's recovery as "slow
but progressive".
Dr Garcia Sabrido examined the Cuban leader late last year.
Earlier this week a Spanish newspaper quoted medical sources
as saying Mr Castro opted for a risky medical procedure that
led to grave complications.