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Nobel to Obama is a positive step: Fidel Castro

Former Cuban dictator Fidel Castro has termed the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to US president Obama as a ‘positive step’.

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Former Cuban dictator Fidel Castro has termed the controversial awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to US President Barack Obama as a ‘positive step’.
 
But Castro’s thumbs-up may be the last thing Obama wanted, as his words will only strengthen conservative complaints that the prize was an anti-American gesture.

“Many believe that he still has not earned the right to receive such a distinction. But we would like to see, more than a prize for the US president, a criticism of the genocidal policies that have been followed by more than a few presidents of that country,” The Telegraph quoted Castro, 83, as saying.

Castro, in his regular ‘Reflections of Comrade Fidel,’ wrote that he had often disagreed with the choice of Norway's Nobel judges, but this time, “I must admit that in this case, in my opinion, it was a positive step”.

Castro has praised some of the young American president's policies in recent months, while criticising him for not lifting the US trade embargo on the Caribbean island.

As Castro made his opinion public on Saturday, criticisms and shock over the award had been flowing in for more than 24 hours.

“This is ridiculous -- embarrassing, even…I admire President Obama. I like President Obama. I voted for President Obama. But the peace prize?” wrote Ruth Marcus of the Washington Post.

“The Nobel Peace Prize award to Barack Obama seems so goofy, even if you're a fan, you have to admit that he hasn't really done much yet as a peacemaker,” wrote another columnist David Ignatius.

On Friday, Obama had described himself as "surprised and deeply humbled" by the award, saying he did not deserve it but would accept it as "a call to action".

He also went out of his way to remind listeners that he has still a long way to go to achieve the goals that the Nobel Committee apparently expects of him, whether it is ridding the world of nuclear weapons, fighting climate change or delivering peace to the Middle East.

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