Lula, Fidel Castro hold ‘emotional’ meeting

Photographs showed the two longtime friends chatting and smiling while sitting around a table and standing in the backyard of a two-story home. Castro wore a white Nike windbreaker and looked elderly but in good shape.

Lula told reporters the ailing 83-year-old looked “exceptionally good,” state-run media said.

A report on Cuban television said the two men had a long, “friendly dialogue” touching on topics including the global climate change conference in December in Copenhagen and the just-ended Rio Group summit in Cancun.

Castro, who ruled Cuba for 49 years before health problems forced him to give way in 2008 to his younger brother, President Raul Castro, thanked Lula for his “gestures of solidarity and cooperation” with Cuba, the report said.

“The emotional meeting was an expression of the existing friendship between the two leaders and the brotherhood that unites the two countries,” it said.

The trip was Lula’s third to Cuba in two years and was meant to signal Cuba’s importance to whomever is elected his successor in Brazil’s October election, a Brazilian diplomat said.

Under Lula, a former union leader, Brazil has provided money and corporate muscle to the island at a time when its economy has suffered in the global economic recession.

State-controlled oil giant Petrobras is studying whether to drill for oil in Cuba’s offshore and Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht is heading a massive remake of the port of Mariel, west of Havana, into Cuba’s main commercial port.

Brazil’s state-run National Development Bank has given $300 million to Odebrecht to build new highways, rail lines, wharves and warehouses at Mariel, best known as the site of a 1980 exodus in which thousands of Cubans fled to the United States in boats.

President Raul Castro and Lula presided over a meeting on Wednesday night when Cuban and Brazilian officials signed a dozen accords on such things as technology transfer, biotechnology, agriculture and public health.