HAVANA - Fidel Castro was out of bed and talking following his intestinal 
surgery, Venezuela's president said Sunday as messages wishing the Cuban leader 
a quick recovery poured in from Latin America. 
 
 
   A photograph of Cuba's 
 President Fidel Castro hangs in between buildings in Havana, August 6, 
 2006. Word filtered through the ranks of the Cuban Communist Party and 
 government that Castro was recovering from surgery, but his location and 
 exact condition remained a mystery on Sunday, a week after his 
 unprecedented handover of power. [Reuters] | 
Cuban officials have provided no details and released no pictures of Castro 
since his surgery was announced last Monday, fueling speculation around the 
world about his condition. Raul Castro, the defense minister, also has not been 
seen in public since the announcement. 
"How are you, Fidel?" Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said during his weekly 
TV and radio program, suggesting he believed the Cuban leader was watching. "We 
have reliable information of your quick and notable recuperation." 
"Fidel Castro, a hug for you, friend and comrade, and I know you are getting 
better," Chavez said. 
Talking by phone with Bolivian President Evo Morales later during the 
program, Chavez said that Castro was bouncing back quickly. 
"This morning I learned that he's very well, that he is already getting out 
of bed, he's talking more than he should, because he talks a lot, you know. He 
has sent us greetings," Chavez said. 
Morales said he was glad to learn of Castro's recovery, and "what's left is 
for him to be incorporated into the battle of his country" again. Saying Castro 
was like an "older brother," Morales added, "We hope to see our friend Fidel 
soon." 
Before Castro fell ill, Morales had promised to travel to Havana for Castro's 
80th birthday on Aug. 13 and bring him a cake made from the flour of coca 
leaves. 
Former Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega arrived in Havana from Nicaragua 
late Saturday and said: "I am sure that we will soon have Fidel resuming his 
functions and leading his people." 
Elian Gonzalez, the Cuban boy at the center of a dramatic international 
custody battle six years ago between his relatives in Miami, Fla. and his father 
in Cuba, joined the list of people wishing Castro a swift recovery. 
"We send you this letter to let you know that we are worried about your 
health," Elian Gonzalez, now 12, wrote to Castro along with his half-siblings 
and cousins. The letter was published Sunday in the Communist Youth newspaper 
Juventud Rebelde. 
Morales, elected in December as Bolivia's first Indian president, said his 
government would send a high-level mission to Havana in the coming days, 
according to his spokesman Alex Contreras. 
In a message to Castro on Tuesday, Morales referred to the Cuban leader as 
his "friend and brother" and wished him a speedy recovery "to continue in the 
trenches in the anti-imperialist struggle." 
Cuban Vice President Carlos Lage on Saturday denied reports that Castro had 
stomach cancer and said the Cuban leader has "been made well by the operation 
and is recuperating favorably." 
In Washington, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Sunday the United 
States wants to help Cubans prepare for democracy but is not contemplating an 
invasion of the island in the wake of Castro's illness. 
Cuban authorities have beefed up security by mobilizing citizen defense 
militias, increasing street patrols, and ordering decommissioned military 
officers to check in at posts daily. 
Roman Catholic Cardinal Jaime Ortega, the island's top churchman, called on 
parishioners Sunday to pray for the Castro's health, peace on the island, and 
fraternity among all Cubans, both here and abroad. 
"We pray for the fatherland, for Cuba, and those who are leading it," Ortega 
told reporters in brief comments after his regular Sunday Mass at the cathedral 
in Old Havana. 
Outside another church, a group of political prisoners' wives known as the 
Ladies in White held their weekly silent march after Sunday Mass without 
interruption by authorities.