The leader of the Cuban revolution, Fidel Castro, published an article on Monday denying that his health is deteriorating.
“I do not even remember what a headache is,” 86-year-old Castro said in the ironically titled article, "Fidel Castro’s Agony," published in the government-run newspaper Granma.
“To prove that this is a lie, I am presenting the photographs accompanying this article,” Fidel added, commenting on rumors that his health had worsened and that his “state is very close to neurovegetative.”
The four photographs of Fidel, made by his son Alex and published on Cubadebate website, show the legendary revolutionary walking around in a peasant straw hat, blue sports pants and red-checked shirt. In one of the photos he can be seen with a fresh issue of Granma.
Castro said he stopped writing his "Reflections" columns because "it is not my role to occupy the pages of our media that are targeted at other aims.”
“I like writing, and I write; I like studying, and I study,” Fidel wrote.
Last Thursday a Spanish newspaper ABC quoted Venezuelan doctor Jose Marquina, as saying Castro had suffered a massive stroke and was dying.
Marquina has made similar claims in the past concerning Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's health, and those have proven false. In April, Marquina said that Chavez, who has battled an undisclosed form of cancer, was in his “last days” and would be dead in less than a year. But within days of Marquina's pronouncement, the Venezuelan leader said he had beaten his cancer and appeared stronger in public.