A painting of Cuba's former president Fidel Castro is seen at a factory in Havana, Cuba November 26, 2016. REUTERS/Enrique De La Osa
HAVANA (Reuters) - From the Bay of Pigs invasion to a historic visit by President Barack Obama to Havana, Cubans have known for generations that whenever the United States turns its face to Cuba, Fidel Castro would be staring right back.
But the death of "El Comandante" has added to worries among Cubans that U.S. President-Elect Donald Trump will slam the door shut on nascent trade and travel ties, undoing two years of detente between the estranged neighbours.
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