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Throngs to pay homage to Cuba's late leader

The USSR bankrolled Castro's regime until 1989, when the Soviet bloc's collapse sent Cuba's economy into free-fall.

The urn with the ashes of Cuban leader Fidel Castro is driven through the streets of Havana starting a four-day journey across Cuba, on November 30, 2016

After a subdued weekend following his death on Friday, hundreds of thousands are expected to flock to the plaza where Castro would often rail against the US "yankees" and "empire" during his legendary, marathon speeches.

"You'll see how the people of Cuba really are. You'll see how they are suffering, how they feel about a person they love," said Jorge Guilarte, a 50-year-old bike-taxi driver.

Castro, whose 1959 revolution toppled a dictatorship with the promise of bringing justice and equality to his Caribbean island, was a major 20th century figure.

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While some saw him as a socialist hero who brought education and free health care to this country, others labeled him a "dictator" who caused economic hardship and sparked an exodus of Cubans to Florida seeking a better life.

In a sign of changing times, US President Barack Obama visited the plaza during his historic visit to Havana in March, when he became the first US leader since 1928 to step foot in Cuba.

In 2014, Fidel's brother and successor, Raul Castro, announced a diplomatic detente with Obama, who has lifted some trade barriers. On Monday, the first regular flights from the United States to the Cuban capital will resume.

Raul Castro has enacted modest, slow reforms that have slightly opened up the economy. Government opponents hope that Fidel's death will prompt him to launch bolder changes.

Fidel handed power to Raul Castro in 2006 after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery. His cause of death on Friday at age 90 has not been disclosed.

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'Fidel is the people'

At the Revolution Square, famous for a government building adorned with the face of Argentine-born guerrilla Ernesto "Che" Guevara, organizers installed a giant photo at the National Library of the Fidel Castro carrying a rifle during the revolution that brought him to power.

Officials have yet to confirm whether an urn carrying his ashes will be placed on a platform so that Cubans can file in front of his remains.

"Fidel is the people. Everybody loves him here. I'm expecting the plaza to overflow with people, like when he would come to meet the people," said Ernestina Suarez, a 67-year-old housewife.

"Saying goodbye to Fidel will be beautiful," she said.

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Dissidents who were repressed by his regime for years said they were happy that the "dictator" had died, but they called off regular demonstrations on Sunday out of deference to those in mourning.

"We are not happy about the death of a man, a human being. We are happy about the death of dictators," Berta Soler, leader of the Ladies in White, told AFP.

In Miami, where so many flocked in the past decades, Cuban-Americans celebrated the death of the man they called a "tyrant" with street parties throughout the weekend.

'Nothing changes'

After two days of commemorations in the capital, Castro's ashes will go on a four-day island-wide procession starting Wednesday before being buried in the southeastern city of Santiago de Cuba on December 4.

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Santiago, Cuba's second city, was the scene of Castro's ill-fated first attempt at revolution in 1953 - six years before he succeeded in ousting the US-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista.

Fidel Castro, who came to power as a bearded, cigar-chomping 32-year-old, adopted the slogan "socialism or death" and kept his faith to the end.

He survived more than 600 assassination attempts, according to aides, as well as the failed 1961 US-backed Bay of Pigs invasion.

His outrage over that botched invasion contributed to the Cuban missile crisis the following year, when the world stood on the brink of nuclear war.

jpegMpeg4-1280x720The USSR bankrolled Castro's regime until 1989, when the Soviet bloc's collapse sent Cuba's economy into free-fall.

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Daniel Martinez, a 33-year-old cook, is not a fan of the regime but was not thrilled with the celebrations in Miami.

"I have nothing personal against Fidel, but I am not a 'Castrista.' I don't consider myself a dissident. I simply don't like this system, neither with Fidel nor with Raul," he said. "Nothing changes here. Nothing moves."

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