<p>Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva spent more than an hour discussing “various topics” with his longtime friend, the 83-year-old Castro, who ceded power to his younger brother Raul -- first temporarily, then permanently -- after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006.<br /><br />The meeting was closed to international news media based in Havana, but information about it was carried in Cuban state media and by Brazil’s private Agencia Estado news agency.<br /><br />Fidel Castro has not been seen in public since falling seriously ill, and his exact ailment has remained a state secret, though he has appeared healthier in photos released periodically by Cuba’s government.<br /><br />Photographs of Wednesday’s meeting released by Brazil’s presidency show a beaming Castro wearing blue-and-white exercise clothing, one of a series of tracksuits that have become his trademark uniform since he has been holed up in an undisclosed location.<br /><br />The gray-bearded revolutionary was thought to be in far graver health — in fact, rumours of his imminent death were frequent -- the last time Silva came to see him in January 2008.<br /><br />This time, Silva felt Castro looked “much different”' and improved, Agencia Estado said, citing unidentified presidential aides. Raul Castro and Franklin Martins, Silva’s communications minister, participated in the meeting. The pictures released by Brazil also showed Silva using a photographer’s camera to take a shot of Castro and Martins.<br /><br />Cuba’s state television led its evening newscast with a report on the meeting although it didn’t broadcast any images of Castro until the 30-minute show’s closing, when it displayed several still photographs of the former leader.<br /><br />The report said Castro and Silva discussed several matters, including the UN climate conference in Copenhagen. After that conference, Castro released a string of essays strongly criticising US President Barack Obama for Washington’s brokering of an accord that urges — but does not require —major polluters to make deeper emissions cuts.<br /><br />Also visiting Cuba was Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez. Silva, Chavez and Raul Castro had all been in the Mexican Caribbean city of Playa del Carmen on Tuesday for a Latin American and Caribbean “unity” summit.<br /><br />There was no word on whether Castro met Chavez, a frequent visitor to Cuba.</p>
<p>Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva spent more than an hour discussing “various topics” with his longtime friend, the 83-year-old Castro, who ceded power to his younger brother Raul -- first temporarily, then permanently -- after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006.<br /><br />The meeting was closed to international news media based in Havana, but information about it was carried in Cuban state media and by Brazil’s private Agencia Estado news agency.<br /><br />Fidel Castro has not been seen in public since falling seriously ill, and his exact ailment has remained a state secret, though he has appeared healthier in photos released periodically by Cuba’s government.<br /><br />Photographs of Wednesday’s meeting released by Brazil’s presidency show a beaming Castro wearing blue-and-white exercise clothing, one of a series of tracksuits that have become his trademark uniform since he has been holed up in an undisclosed location.<br /><br />The gray-bearded revolutionary was thought to be in far graver health — in fact, rumours of his imminent death were frequent -- the last time Silva came to see him in January 2008.<br /><br />This time, Silva felt Castro looked “much different”' and improved, Agencia Estado said, citing unidentified presidential aides. Raul Castro and Franklin Martins, Silva’s communications minister, participated in the meeting. The pictures released by Brazil also showed Silva using a photographer’s camera to take a shot of Castro and Martins.<br /><br />Cuba’s state television led its evening newscast with a report on the meeting although it didn’t broadcast any images of Castro until the 30-minute show’s closing, when it displayed several still photographs of the former leader.<br /><br />The report said Castro and Silva discussed several matters, including the UN climate conference in Copenhagen. After that conference, Castro released a string of essays strongly criticising US President Barack Obama for Washington’s brokering of an accord that urges — but does not require —major polluters to make deeper emissions cuts.<br /><br />Also visiting Cuba was Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez. Silva, Chavez and Raul Castro had all been in the Mexican Caribbean city of Playa del Carmen on Tuesday for a Latin American and Caribbean “unity” summit.<br /><br />There was no word on whether Castro met Chavez, a frequent visitor to Cuba.</p>