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Cuba claims Bush insisted Castro leave U.N. summit

MONTERREY, Mexico, Saturday (Reuters) Cuba accused U.S. President George W. Bush on Friday of threatening to boycott this week's U.N. aid summit in Mexico unless Cuban President Fidel Castro was made to leave.

Castro abandoned the summit meeting in Mexico's northern city of Monterrey on Thursday, shortly before Bush arrived, and a senior Cuban official said the communist leader was asked by Mexican officials to make himself scarce.

"We received very senior people from the Mexican government before the conference who indicated they had been subjected to U.S. government pressure, specifically threats from President Bush that he would not come to Monterrey if Fidel Castro came," said Ricardo Alarcon, president of Cuba's national assembly.

U.S. and Mexican officials denied the allegations but the dispute threatened to end a recent easing in U.S.-Cuban tensions and hit Cuba's long-standing friendship with Mexico.

Alarcon, who took over as head of Cuba's summit delegation when Castro walked out on Thursday, said the veteran leader refused to stay away from the conference altogether but agreed to cut short his trip, leaving after his speech and before Bush arrived.

Washington flatly denied the Cuban claims. Asked if the United States pressured Mexico to coerce Castro into leaving, a senior U.S. official told reporters: "No. No. ... We heard from the Mexicans that he was coming, and that he was leaving," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castaneda also insisted that U.S. officials put no pressure on Mexico, the summit host, and that Mexico at no point asked Castro to leave early.

But Alarcon said Castaneda "knows perfectly well how it all happened" and that Mexican officials were the ones who persuaded Castro to leave before Bush arrived.

CUBA-MEXICO RELATIONSHIP STRAINED

"People with great authority transmitted the message and specifically asked us, given they could not prevent Fidel from coming, that he leave immediately after lunch," Alarcon said.

Mexico has been a close ally of Castro's government since he took power in 1959 but relations have been strained in recent years as Mexico has moved closer economically and politically to the United States.

The latest dispute has largely overshadowed the summit meeting and some officials here have privately suggested that may have been Castro's intention all along.

"The presence of Fidel in the summit has been a highly important event, which in diplomatic terms means he stole the show," Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque told Cuban state TV in a telephone interview from Monterrey.

Cuban state TV and radio have played over-and-over again Castro's speech, and a special two-part program on the "repercussion" of his presence in Monterrey was shown on Thursday and Friday evenings.

President Vicente Fox's government has offended Cuba by criticizing it over human rights and democracy issues.

The five-day UN development conference, attended by more than 50 heads of state in the final two days, was due to end late on Friday with rich and poor nations saying they had struck a new bargain to fight world poverty.

The U.S. government and the European Union last week pledged to increase the amount of aid they offer poor nations, while at the same time insisting they will focus their support on those nations where governments were actively fighting corruption and making democratic reforms.

"We must tie greater aid to political and legal and economic reforms," Bush told the conference on Friday morning.

Castro ridiculed the rich world's efforts to fight poverty during his speech on Thursday, saying they were masters of a "genocidal" system that condemns billions to misery.

"The existing world economic order constitutes a system of plundering and exploitation like no other in history," he said.

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