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Cuba's party congress agrees to allow private property

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Delegates cast their votes during the Congress of the Cuban Communist Party session in Havana
Image caption,

Party members have been voting on a raft of reforms

Cuba says it will allow people to buy and sell their homes for the first time since the communist revolution in 1959.

For the past 50 years, Cubans have only been allowed to pass on their homes to their children, or to swap them through a complicated and often corrupt system.

The move was decided during the first congress held by the ruling Communist Party in 14 years, aimed at breathing new life into the communist system.

No details were given on how the new property sales could work.

Cuban President Raul Castro warned that the concentration of property would not be allowed.

During the congress, President Castro also said top political positions should be limited to two five-year terms, and promised "systematic rejuvenation" of the government.

He said the party leadership was in need of renewal and should subject itself to severe self-criticism.

The proposal is unprecedented under Cuban communism.

In an editorial published in Cuban state media, former president and leader of the 1959 revolution Fidel Castro endorsed the change.

He wrote that a new generation was needed to correct the errors of the past to ensure the communist system survived once the current generation of leaders had gone.

Cuba's Communist Party approved the reforms on Monday.

State media reported that party members also voted for a new party leadership, but the results were not immediately disclosed.

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