Castro: Spain's Three Kings event was
an insult
HAVANA -- (AP) -- Fidel Castro says a Three Kings celebration
held by
representatives of Spain was insulting to Cuban children, but
denies that his
criticism was meant to fuel bad relations between the two nations.
``We don't want to throw fuel on the fire in our relations with
Spain,'' the Cuban
leader said in comments published Wednesday in the Communist
Party daily
Granma.
``But no one should doubt that any rudeness, any provocation,
any insult will have
an appropriate response,'' Castro said.
The comments were published Wednesday in official newspapers.
Cuban authorities were enraged by images of Cuban children scrambling
and
fighting last week over candies tossed in the streets by three
men -- at least two
of them Spanish officials -- dressed as the biblical wise men.
The criticism of the Spanish Cultural Center's handling of the
Friday event in Old
Havana is the latest flap between Cuba and Spain -- one of the
island's principal
commercial partners.
During an evening program on state television dedicated to the
subject, the
criticism extended to a well-known veteran member of the foreign
press corps in
Cuba and his coverage of the celebration.
Participants took issue with Pascal Fletcher's dispatch for Reuters,
rejecting his
characterization of the resulting flap over the event as an ``ideological
storm.''
They also denied the story's assertion that Spanish officials
had obtained advance
approval for the event, and said that the article ``tried to
identify the Cuban
response with an anti-religious sentiment.''
The attack on Fletcher, a British correspondent for the Financial
Times of London
and part-time reporter for Reuters, was harsh and personal in
nature.
Program participants also criticized his past reportage and accused
him of being
``disrespectful of the figure of [comrade] Fidel'' and of being
a ``servant'' of the U.S.
Interests Section -- the American mission here.
The Reuters office in Havana said it would have no comment on
the criticisms.
Fletcher was unavailable for comment on Wednesday.
``We believe that our coverage of Cuba is fair, balanced and accurate,''
the
Financial Times said in a statement Wednesday. ``We stand by
our
correspondent, Pascal Fletcher, who is a highly professional
correspondent. We
remain committed to writing fair and accurate news about Cuba.''