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Hôm nay là sinh nhật ngài chủ tịch Fidel Castro . bác nào có thiện cảm với ông già chiến binh 80 tuổi này thì cùng vào đây với em gửi lời chúc mừng sinh nhật ổng nhé 
em xin phép copy và paste lại 1 mẩu tin về ngày sinh nhật thứ 80 của ông Fidel
Havana.– Supporters of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, anxious to see him reappear after an unprecedented absence, are preparing to celebrate his 80th birthday on Sunday with or without him.
Castro has not been seen in public since July 26 and he stunned the country five days later by ceding power to his brother after complicated stomach surgery.
"We are hoping Fidel will say something to us on Sunday. I'm sure he will appear at some point," said pensioner Roque Mejias, 74, walking in Havana's Vedado district. "We are very hopeful he will recover."
Dozens of musicians will perform on Saturday night on the "Anti-Imperialist Stage" opposite the U.S. diplomatic mission on Havana's Malecon seafront boulevard. They plan to play through midnight to sing Castro "Happy Birthday."
Some Cubans will do what officials termed voluntary work on Sunday to pay homage to the ailing revolutionary and to show support for his communist-run government.
Sugar industry workers will work four extra hours in cane plantations, officials said. Communist youth organizations will man building sites and other workplaces.
There was no new word on Friday on Castro's condition. Officials say he is recovering and will be back running the government in weeks if not months.
His ebullient Venezuelan ally President Huge Chavez said with typical rhetorical flourish on Thursday that Castro was fighting a "great battle for life."
But neither Castro nor his younger brother and acting president, Raul Castro, have appeared in public. Many Cubans, accustomed to knowing little about the internal workings of the government, were not sure who was running the country.
"I want to see him, and hear him say he is better. We love him very much," said Agustina Rodriguez, 63, dressed in white as is the custom in Afro-Cuban religion. She said she was praying for his recovery.
Rumors that Castro is dead have circulated wildly among the Cuban emigre community in Miami, where his enemies hope his demise will rid the Caribbean island nation of communism.
Some in Miami said they hoped that Castro's 80th birthday would be his last.
"The best thing he can do is die so that this whole disgrace should end," said Huber Matos, who fought alongside Castro in 1959, was later jailed for 20 years as a traitor and now lives in Miami.
In Cuba, dissidents who oppose Castro's one-party rule and work for democratic change are not so sure Castro's time is up or that his brother Raul is running the government.
"I do not believe he is dead. He is still in charge and running Cuba," said Vladimiro Roca, the son of a founding father of Cuban communism who has spent five years in jail for criticizing Castro's economic policies.
"Otherwise Raul would have appeared already," Roca said. "Will Castro reappear on Sunday? That depends on what effect he wants to cause."
The United States, for its part, is still hoping for democratic change. "When a rotor comes off a helicopter, it crashes. When a supreme leader disappears from an authoritarian regime, the authoritarian regime flounders," said Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Shannon on Friday.
The government has organized hundreds of meetings at work places and in parks to rally support. "We have given a good example of unity," Communist Party official Fernando Remirez de Estenoz, told reporters. "Under the leadership of the Party and Raul, we will continue our revolution."
em xin phép copy và paste lại 1 mẩu tin về ngày sinh nhật thứ 80 của ông Fidel
Havana.– Supporters of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, anxious to see him reappear after an unprecedented absence, are preparing to celebrate his 80th birthday on Sunday with or without him.
Castro has not been seen in public since July 26 and he stunned the country five days later by ceding power to his brother after complicated stomach surgery.
"We are hoping Fidel will say something to us on Sunday. I'm sure he will appear at some point," said pensioner Roque Mejias, 74, walking in Havana's Vedado district. "We are very hopeful he will recover."
Dozens of musicians will perform on Saturday night on the "Anti-Imperialist Stage" opposite the U.S. diplomatic mission on Havana's Malecon seafront boulevard. They plan to play through midnight to sing Castro "Happy Birthday."
Some Cubans will do what officials termed voluntary work on Sunday to pay homage to the ailing revolutionary and to show support for his communist-run government.
Sugar industry workers will work four extra hours in cane plantations, officials said. Communist youth organizations will man building sites and other workplaces.
There was no new word on Friday on Castro's condition. Officials say he is recovering and will be back running the government in weeks if not months.
His ebullient Venezuelan ally President Huge Chavez said with typical rhetorical flourish on Thursday that Castro was fighting a "great battle for life."
But neither Castro nor his younger brother and acting president, Raul Castro, have appeared in public. Many Cubans, accustomed to knowing little about the internal workings of the government, were not sure who was running the country.
"I want to see him, and hear him say he is better. We love him very much," said Agustina Rodriguez, 63, dressed in white as is the custom in Afro-Cuban religion. She said she was praying for his recovery.
Rumors that Castro is dead have circulated wildly among the Cuban emigre community in Miami, where his enemies hope his demise will rid the Caribbean island nation of communism.
Some in Miami said they hoped that Castro's 80th birthday would be his last.
"The best thing he can do is die so that this whole disgrace should end," said Huber Matos, who fought alongside Castro in 1959, was later jailed for 20 years as a traitor and now lives in Miami.
In Cuba, dissidents who oppose Castro's one-party rule and work for democratic change are not so sure Castro's time is up or that his brother Raul is running the government.
"I do not believe he is dead. He is still in charge and running Cuba," said Vladimiro Roca, the son of a founding father of Cuban communism who has spent five years in jail for criticizing Castro's economic policies.
"Otherwise Raul would have appeared already," Roca said. "Will Castro reappear on Sunday? That depends on what effect he wants to cause."
The United States, for its part, is still hoping for democratic change. "When a rotor comes off a helicopter, it crashes. When a supreme leader disappears from an authoritarian regime, the authoritarian regime flounders," said Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Shannon on Friday.
The government has organized hundreds of meetings at work places and in parks to rally support. "We have given a good example of unity," Communist Party official Fernando Remirez de Estenoz, told reporters. "Under the leadership of the Party and Raul, we will continue our revolution."