Fidel Castro takes blame for 1960s gay persecution

HAVANA, (Reuters) – Fidel Castro took the blame for  a wave of homophobia launched by his revolutionary government  in the 1960s, but said it happened because he was distracted by  other problems, in an interview published yesterday in a  Mexican newspaper.

The former Cuban president told La Jornada the persecution  of gays, who were rounded up at the time as supposed  counterrevolutionaries and placed in forced labor camps, was a  “great injustice” that arose from the island’s history of  discrimination against homosexuals.

He said he was not prejudiced against gays, but “if anyone  is responsible (for the persecution), it’s me.”

“I’m not going to place the blame on others,” he said.

Castro, 84, said he was busy in those days fending off  threats from the United States, including attempts on his life,  and trying to maintain the revolution that put him in power in  1959.

“We had so many and such terrible problems, problems of  life or death,” Castro said.

“In those moments I was not able to deal with that matter  (of homosexuals). I found myself immersed, principally, in the  Crisis of October (Cuban Missile Crisis), in the war, in policy  questions,” he said.

Official persecution of gays continued into the 1970s  before homosexual acts were decriminalized in 1979. Today,  Cuba’s medical service provides free sex-change operations.

Yesterday’s story was the second from La Jornada based on a  recent five-hour interview with Castro, who has reappeared in  public after four years of seclusion following surgery for an  undisclosed intestinal illness.

On Monday, the Mexico-City based newspaper quoted Castro as  saying his illness nearly killed him, but that he has mostly  recovered and is trying to stop a nuclear war he believes to be  imminent.