A private ceremony was held at Santiago's Santa Ifigenia Cemetery, state media reported.
Castro's cremated remains were due to be placed a few steps from the mausoleum of independence hero Jose Marti, another towering figure of Cuban history who Castro long admired.
Castro
died on Nov. 25 aged 90. He had been out of power for a decade but
never far from the center of public life, writing a periodic column on
world and local matters and receiving foreign dignitaries at his home on
the outskirts of Havana.
He gave Cuba an
outsized influence in world affairs, but leaves a mixed legacy. He was
feted by Nelson Mandela for helping end apartheid at a time the West
supported the racist system, but also helped take the world to the brink
of nuclear war during the Cuban missile crisis.
Forced
to step down due to an intestinal ailment, Castro ceded power to his
younger brother, current President Raul Castro, at first provisionally
in 2006 and then definitively in 2008. Cuba has not revealed the cause
of his death.
In keeping with his wishes,
Castro's image will not be immortalized with statues nor will public
places be named after him, his brother said on Saturday.
Initially
the act at the cemetery was due to be carried live on television, but
hours before official media announced it would be "solemn and private."
Cuban
television cut from live coverage at the appointed hour of 7 a.m. EST
(1200 GMT). At that moment in Havana, military cannons unleashed a
21-gun salute that thundered across the capital city.
PHOTO OF FIDEL CASTRO. |
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