Home>News Center>World
         
 

Cuba's Castro says Bush 'very much a fool'
(AP)
Updated: 2005-12-24 09:07

Fidel Castro said Friday that the Bush administration was wrong to prohibit Cuba from sending a team to next year's World Baseball Classic.

"He is very much a fool," the Cuban president said of Bush. "He doesn't know who the Cuban baseball players are, or that they are Olympic and world champions. If he knew, he would know something about this country's government."

Castro mentioned the ongoing dispute during the second day of regular sessions of the island's National Assembly.

Cuban President Fidel Castro speaks during a Session of the Cuban Parliament, in the Palace of Conventions, Friday, Dec. 23, 2005, in Havana, Cuba.
Cuban President Fidel Castro speaks during a Session of the Cuban Parliament, in the Palace of Conventions, Friday, Dec. 23, 2005, in Havana, Cuba.[AP]
The U.S. Treasury Department last week rejected the application for Cuba to play in the 16-team tournament scheduled for March 3-20, evidently because of concerns that Castro's government could enjoy financial gain by participating.

Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association, which are organizing the tournament, reapplied Thursday to the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control. OFAC's permission is required under U.S. laws and regulations governing transactions with Cuba, which has been under an American trade and financial embargo for more than four decades.

In an attempt to eliminate a major concern of the U.S. government, the Cuban Baseball Federation announced Thursday night that any money gained by the national team would be donated to Hurricane Katrina victims.

Cuban baseball "would be willing for the money associated with participation in the classic to go to those displaced by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans," said the statement read on state television by baseball federation president Carlos Rodriguez.

Cuba is scheduled to play first-round games in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and would remain in San Juan if it advances to the second round.

Antonio Munoz, a businessman who agreed to pay millions of dollars to bring the games to Puerto Rico, thinks the Treasury Department will reverse its decision.

"All efforts are being made to get Cuba to come and participate and I think we will succeed," Munoz told The Associated Press by telephone from New York.



Rebels kill 8 policemen in ambush in Peru
Public transport strike in New York
Torrential monsoon rains in southern thailand
 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Sleigh bells ringing throughout Chinese cities

 

   
 

Cuba's Castro says Bush 'very much a fool'

 

   
 

China: No interference in HK affairs

 

   
 

Bin Laden's niece poses in racy photo shoot

 

   
 

Free education for rural students in west

 

   
 

222 people punished for coal mine accidents

 

   
  Cuba's Castro says Bush 'very much a fool'
   
  UN reaches budget deal, ending reform impasse
   
  Rebel attack kills 13 Sri Lankan soldiers
   
  Iraqi Sunnis demonstrate against election results
   
  Italy issues European arrest warrants against CIA agents
   
  Azerbaijani plane crash kills all 23 onboard
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement